Zürcher Nachrichten - Cambodian deported by US faced 'misery' in Eswatini prison

EUR -
AED 4.271337
AFN 72.697954
ALL 95.445036
AMD 428.018365
ANG 2.082414
AOA 1067.690042
ARS 1629.450128
AUD 1.623936
AWG 2.09351
AZN 1.978491
BAM 1.95366
BBD 2.342424
BDT 142.772988
BGN 1.942219
BHD 0.439117
BIF 3455.30009
BMD 1.163061
BND 1.485866
BOB 8.036162
BRL 5.830421
BSD 1.163021
BTN 110.697263
BWP 15.634806
BYN 3.197084
BYR 22795.994479
BZD 2.339028
CAD 1.606472
CDF 2622.702663
CHF 0.911747
CLF 0.026514
CLP 1043.509549
CNY 7.902709
CNH 7.894369
COP 4226.912385
CRC 529.218001
CUC 1.163061
CUP 30.821115
CVE 110.143871
CZK 24.26354
DJF 206.698957
DKK 7.472236
DOP 68.424751
DZD 154.816764
EGP 60.737257
ERN 17.445914
ETB 187.509889
FJD 2.561297
FKP 0.861336
GBP 0.863071
GEL 3.093829
GGP 0.861336
GHS 13.50315
GIP 0.861336
GMD 84.323186
GNF 10192.790646
GTQ 8.868247
GYD 243.32241
HKD 9.112867
HNL 30.941972
HRK 7.535587
HTG 152.292519
HUF 357.039357
IDR 20694.22705
ILS 3.348511
IMP 0.861336
INR 110.962702
IQD 1523.524529
IRR 1539194.851589
ISK 143.626556
JEP 0.861336
JMD 183.299208
JOD 0.824593
JPY 184.966814
KES 150.674831
KGS 101.709898
KHR 4665.868787
KMF 494.301405
KPW 1046.764461
KRW 1750.999631
KWD 0.359909
KYD 0.969234
KZT 550.514581
LAK 25492.964531
LBP 104172.238291
LKR 376.815603
LRD 212.825948
LSL 18.988418
LTL 3.434216
LVL 0.703524
LYD 7.413879
MAD 10.701531
MDL 20.189797
MGA 4886.626013
MKD 61.651676
MMK 2442.198416
MNT 4161.978446
MOP 9.38448
MRU 46.508853
MUR 55.036093
MVR 17.910155
MWK 2016.682187
MXN 20.11421
MYR 4.613284
MZN 74.326283
NAD 18.988418
NGN 1594.486963
NIO 42.802928
NOK 10.769825
NPR 177.11522
NZD 1.988835
OMR 0.447191
PAB 1.163021
PEN 3.961244
PGK 5.074419
PHP 71.666664
PKR 323.810695
PLN 4.234403
PYG 7211.100711
QAR 4.252142
RON 5.239359
RSD 117.412194
RUB 83.102528
RWF 1700.929431
SAR 4.350004
SBD 9.357038
SCR 16.38855
SDG 698.414642
SEK 10.827164
SGD 1.485985
SHP 0.868342
SLE 28.614093
SLL 24388.808889
SOS 664.669041
SRD 43.171661
STD 24073.013306
STN 24.473086
SVC 10.176808
SYP 128.671037
SZL 18.984123
THB 37.942562
TJS 10.705527
TMT 4.070713
TND 3.399761
TOP 2.800371
TRY 53.389208
TTD 7.893319
TWD 36.62363
TZS 3047.609323
UAH 51.504858
UGX 4384.178572
USD 1.163061
UYU 46.448919
UZS 13960.647008
VES 612.014881
VND 30646.074313
VUV 138.099083
WST 3.169966
XAF 655.236415
XAG 0.015199
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.143231
XCG 2.095995
XDR 0.815142
XOF 655.239228
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.564615
ZAR 19.013609
ZMK 10468.952028
ZMW 21.893923
ZWL 374.505149
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.5

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.1600

    16.64

    +0.96%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.87

    +0.39%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    86.61

    +0.22%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    51.38

    -0.29%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.73

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    104.23

    -0.51%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.66

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.0500

    67.16

    +0.07%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    24.6

    +0.85%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    33.01

    -1%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    14.94

    -1.14%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    65.36

    -0.57%

  • AZN

    -2.7200

    187.03

    -1.45%

  • BP

    -0.5100

    44.36

    -1.15%

Cambodian deported by US faced 'misery' in Eswatini prison
Cambodian deported by US faced 'misery' in Eswatini prison / Photo: TANG CHHIN Sothy - AFP

Cambodian deported by US faced 'misery' in Eswatini prison

A Cambodian refugee long-settled in the United States, ex-convict Pheap Rom, remains bewildered at how he wound up behind bars in the African nation of Eswatini for months after being swept up in Donald Trump's deportation blitz.

Text size:

When Rom and nine other men -- shackled and escorted onto a plane by US authorities -- landed in the kingdom of Eswatini in October, they were greeted on the tarmac by a squad of "military guys with guns and masks", the 43-year-old said.

"I didn't know what was going to happen," he told AFP in an interview in the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh, where he was repatriated in late March.

"I didn't understand why I was being deported to Africa because I'm Cambodian."

Rom is one of around 20 men the United States has deported to landlocked Eswatini -- bordering South Africa and Mozambique -- under a Trump administration scheme challenged in courts and described by rights advocates as akin to "human trafficking".

Eswatini, Africa's last absolute monarchy, is among several "third countries" accepting migrants under shadowy deals enabling the US president's push for mass deportations.

The nation formerly known as Swaziland agreed to accept up to 160 deportees in exchange for around $5.1 million, with plans to forward them to their home countries after Washington said their direct repatriations were denied.

But Rom -- living in the United States with "permanent resident" status since 1985 after his family fled Cambodia's genocidal Khmer Rouge regime -- is just the second to be repatriated from Eswatini, after a Jamaican was returned home last year.

The remainder may still be trapped inside the deportation process, opaque even to those inside it.

- 'In good hands' -

Rom served a 15-year prison sentence in the United States after pleading guilty to attempted murder for firing a gun during two neighbourhood disputes, leaving several people wounded.

"I know what I did was wrong," he said. "I accepted my punishment."

He was detained by immigration authorities upon his release in November 2024, and his green card was revoked after an immigration judge ordered his deportation due to his felony conviction.

He expected to be sent to Cambodia. But landing in Eswatini was like turning back the clock to his prison term, Rom said.

His jailers seemed unaware that the men had served their time and looked at them as if they were "criminals because of what the (US) administration was portraying us to be".

For the first two months at the Matsapha Correctional Centre, Rom said he and fellow deportees "went through misery" -- allowed outdoors for only 15 minutes a day and given one weekly phone call.

"We had an attorney there that was willing to try to come and talk to us, but they weren't letting that attorney in," he said.

Lawyers in Eswatini have corroborated his claim to AFP, saying they have been repeatedly denied access to people expelled by the United States who have been detained without charge.

Eswatini's government has said US deportees were "in good hands" and receiving healthcare, including counselling.

- 'Uniquely barbaric' -

Much of Trump's deportation campaign has been executed by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), criticised for using heavy-handed tactics during crackdowns in US cities.

ICE did not reply to a request for comment about Rom's case.

In July, when the first deportees were sent to Eswatini, a US Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman said on social media they were "so uniquely barbaric that their home countries refused to take them back".

But Rom and his lawyer Tin Thanh Nguyen both expressed doubts the agency even tried to deport him directly to Cambodia, the only country where he has citizenship.

Nguyen is struggling to piece together the logic that led to his client being marooned in a country where he had no ties.

The lawyer painted a picture of a chaotic process, saying Rom was not interviewed in the United States to verify his nationality and was registered for deportation to Thailand, the country where he was born in a refugee camp.

"If ICE was requesting travel documents from Thailand, they went to the wrong country," Nguyen told AFP.

Chann Rotana, a spokesman for Cambodia's foreign ministry, told AFP that the United States had previously sent Cambodian deportees to the country directly with no issues.

"We also don't know why the US this time sent him to Eswatini," the spokesman said.

Now living in Phnom Penh after the Cambodian government facilitated his repatriation from Eswatini, Rom said he was still "getting used to the freedom" but was ready to move on.

Eventually, he hopes to find work, stay in touch with his relatives in the United States and start a new family in Cambodia, he said.

"I want to create a new memory here, because this is my second chance in life."

S.Scheidegger--NZN