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"Fondness": Trump’s American migrant Hunt none of exile

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"Fondness": Trump’s American migrant Hunt none of exile

Franco Karbalo was arrested at the US Immigration Center for an appointment. Shirli Gardado was detained during the work. Camilla Munoz was taken into custody to go home from her honeymoon.

No one is being spared for the migrants of US President Donald Trump to expel the country from the country. And while the government claims that only criminals are being targeted, many of the crosshairs tell a different story.

At an outpost in Texas, immigration agents stopped an unspecified Mexican couple at a Houston Hospital to treat their 10 -year -old daughter cancer.

The families were separated from their children, out of which five are American citizens, the Rights Group Texas Civil Rights Project said.

The mother of the children told the right group, “We had to decide between separating from our children or being deported together.”

“Now we are in Mexico, who are without access to our daughter’s immediate medical care,” she said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

According to the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE), the Trump administration detained 32,809 migrants in its first 50 days in the office, of which about half of which were convicted.

Over the last weekend, it exiled more than 200 prisons in Al Salvador, with rarely accusing the 1798 Alien Enemy Act and most of the exile in Venezuela -based Train de Argua Gang.

Exiled on tattoo

All those who were deported do not appear to be members of the gang.

The 26 -year -old Venezuela’s barber Franco Carbalo, who has been in asylum proceedings since 2023, went to an ice office in Dallas, Texas in February for an appointment.

He did not come out.

“I have not done anything, I am a good person,” he told his wife Johani Sanchez on the phone.

Karbalo told him that the authorities put him in a red uniform, meaning to identify migrants classified as “dangerous”.

In his absence, he had to sleep in his car, reducing resources.

“My lawyer talked with ice and told him that Franco was deported (to Al Salvador), that he had no criminal records, but he suspected that he was a member of the train de Argua due to his tattoo,” Johani Sanchaz said.

Carballo, he said, there are two tattoos: one of the clock the time of birth of his first daughter, and one of the roses.

29 -year -old Venezuela Marwin Yamarte was recognized by family members in Dallas, showing the arrival of deported from the United States in a video released by Salvadoran’s President Naib Bukele.

Arrested a week ago, Yamarte worked as a mechanic and played football with Jersey number 99. This number, his family said, he had a tattoo on his hand.

During the tenure of former President Joe Biden, 35 -year -old Venezuela tattoo artist, Jhone Chasin formally surrendered on his arrival at the border in October 2024.

He was detained due to his tattoo.

Now, the Trump administration has sent him to Al Salvador, despite no evidence against him, his sister Yuliana told AFP.

‘in shock’

The 26 -year -old Peruvian, Camilla Munoz, was stopped at an American region of Puerto Rico in February, while returning to Visconsin after her honeymoon.

Although her visa was over, she had already started the residency processes. Munose is being held in Louisiana, according to her husband Bradley Bartel, who voted for Trump.

“I am still in shock,” he said.

He said, “I wouldn’t say that I have any regrets (voting for Trump), I think with the regret system,” he said.

“I would ask him to solve the judicial system and fix the problem.”

For Immigration Advocate David Rosas, who is advising Bartel, the current crack is the “most scary” of his 21 -year career.

He described migrants as “the backbone of this country”, which no one else wants.

“People feel extremely betrayal,” Rosas said. “And we are going to finish with a lack of great labor until anything changes.”

‘As per the rule’

The 27 -year -old Honduran, Shirley Gardado, Houston had his job when the immigration agent took him.

“He is not a criminal. He is my wife. He is the mother of my son,” said a 25 -year -old Icec Korea, a Sergeant of the US Army.

“He has always done everything by the book,” he said. “He has always been a citizen of a law.”

Gardado entered the country unspecified a decade ago, but started paperwork to get a legal residence.

In his absence, he is taking care of his 10 -month -old son, who is “not sleeping” without his mother.

He is afraid that his wife may be deported, and achieving her return may be a long process.

“This is three to five years old. My son will not have his mother,” he said.

(Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by NDTV employees and is published by a syndicated feed.)

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