Six West Africans are expelled from us to Ghana sent to Togo despite the legal fight

At least six of the 11 West Africans expelled in Ghana as part of the American immigration repression were transferred to Togo, their lawyers said.
The group was continuing the Ghana government to prevent their additional expulsion, among the concerns about their security.
“We can confirm that six have been sent to Togo, the others were sent to countries that I cannot disclose at this stage,” the main BBC’s main lawyer told the BBC.
The nationalities of persons sent to Togo have not been disclosed. The government of Togo has not commented.
Lawyers later withdrew their case against the Ghana government because it was overwhelmed by events. However, they still pursue a separate case arguing that their rights have been raped.
Lawyers said the deportations had prevented the authorities from bringing them to court or justifying their detention.
Last week, Barker-Vormawor told the BBC that he wanted the government to produce the group in court and justify why they were detained against their will, adding that they had raped any Ghanaian law, and that their detention in a military camp was therefore illegal.
On Tuesday, he expressed his disappointment in the face of the Ghana judicial system, noting that the court could have intervened to prevent their expulsion.
The deportees, who include nationals of Nigeria, Togo, Liberia and Gambia, have already been detained in an American detention center before being expelled on an American military plane on hindrances in Ghana under an agreement with the Ghanaian government.
The agreement that Ghana undertakes nationals of various West African countries was announced by President John Mahama two weeks ago, saying that it was approached by the United States to accept the deportees, and that it was because there was the free movement of people in West Africa.
Ghana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, later said that the country received no financial compensation in return.
He said that 40 additional deportees were to arrive in Ghana in the coming days.
Opposition deputies called for the immediate suspension of the American-Ghana agreement until it is ratified by law. They also require total transparency and responsibility concerning the arrangement.
Deportations are part of the difficult approach of the United States government with regard to immigration since President Donald Trump took office in January.
He promised to illegally lead the record deportations of migrants to the country. In some cases, people are expelled to countries where they have no connection.
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