Migrants deported from the US arrive in Uganda News
CBP Photography, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Migrants deported from the US arrive in Uganda

At least eight migrants deported from the US arrived in Uganda on Wednesday. The Ugandan Foreign Ministry only admitted to accepting the deportees on Friday, after widespread media coverage of a statement released by the Ugandan Law Society (ULS).

On Thursday, the ULS and the East Africa Law Society released a joint statement announcing that 12 people were about to be forcibly removed from the US and “dumped” in Uganda. The 12 were scheduled to arrive aboard a privately-owned aircraft without the engagement of relevant state institutions such as the Directorate of Citizenship and Immigration Control, according to the ULS. Finally, no policy document or legislation was presented to oversee the transfer of people from the US to Uganda, according to the two law societies.

The deportees who arrived in Uganda are African, but not Ugandan, according to the statement by the Foreign Ministry. The Foreign Ministry accepted the migrants pursuant to the Agreement for Cooperation in the Examination of Protection Requests signed in July 2025 by the US and Uganda. This “Safe Third Country” agreement permits nationals from other countries in Africa to be sent to Uganda in alignment with the principles of non-refoulement, which means that no person may be sent back to a country where they would face torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. Article 4 of the agreement stipulates that operating procedures will be drafted to implement the agreement. It is not clear if those procedures have been drafted.

“Third Country Deportations” like this are permitted under US law following litigation, which brought the matter to the US Supreme Court in June 2025. The high court stayed a preliminary injunction while the case is pending.

The Uganda deportation agreement is similar to the one between the US and El Salvador. In May 2025, hundreds of Salvadorans and Venezuelans were deported pursuant to that agreement. In September, five migrants aboard a similar flight were allegedly held in straitjackets for 16 hours following their capture by ICE and subsequent flight to Ghana.

It is unclear if the eight people whom the Ugandan Foreign Ministry announced arrived on Wednesday are among  the dozen the UBA alleges were to arrive. The two law societies pledge to fight the “dehumanizing” deportation agreement in court.