Trump Proposes Migrant Detention at Guantánamo Bay, Eliciting Outrage
President Donald Trump announced plans to detain tens of thousands of undocumented migrants at the notorious Guantánamo Bay military facility, a site long criticized for its history of abuse and secrecy. The announcement, made during a press briefing on January 30, raises concerns over the conflation of migrants with terror suspects that once occupied the prison, commonly referred to as “America’s gulag,” according to critics.
Trump claimed the facility could hold “30,000 beds” for “criminal illegal aliens,” stating it would help combat what he described as the “scourge of migrant crime.” This initiative was met with enthusiasm from some Republican leaders but drew widespread condemnation for further stigmatizing immigrant communities. Eleanor Acer, senior director for refugee protection at Human Rights First, labeled the strategy as “political theater aimed at fanning anti-immigrant sentiment.”
Latin American media also voiced disapproval, with Mexico’s La Jornada calling it “institutionalized sadism.” The proposal has alarming implications regarding human rights and legal oversight, as experts worry it may allow indefinite detention at a location historically exempt from scrutiny.
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