INTERNACIONAL
Tras el rechazo del plan inicial, Gran Bretaña firma otro polémico acuerdo con Ruanda por los inmigrantes
El ministro del Interior británico, James Cleverly, firmó este martes un nuevo tratado con Ruanda en Kigali, su capital, para el plan de asilo del gobierno británico. Es parte de la misión del primer ministro Rishi Sunak hacer el acuerdo para enviar migrantes y rechazados aspirantes al asilo, tras el fallo de la Corte Suprema contra el plan inicial Tory, al no considerar a Ruanda “un lugar seguro” para ser juzgado o asilado.
Los barquitos con migrantes que parten de Francia a Gran Bretaña por el Canal de la Mancha obsesionan a los conservadores británicos y especialmente, a su ala derecha.
«Frenar los barcos” se transformó en un objetivo mayor de Rishi Sunak, cuando las elecciones británicas pueden anticiparse en cualquier momento y los laboristas les llevan ventaja.
El acuerdo significa que las personas trasladadas en avión desde Gran Bretaña a Ruanda no pueden ser enviadas a su país de origen, de donde huyeron. Esta había sido la razón principal por la que la Corte Suprema dictaminó que el plan inicial a Ruanda era ilegal.
Esa propuesta había desatado fuertes críticas de organizaciones de derechos humanos.
Gran Bretaña ha firmado este nuevo tratado con Ruanda que, según el Ministro del Interior, abordará “todas las cuestiones”, que hicieron que la Corte Suprema anulara la política de deportación del Reino Unido.
¿Un país inseguro?
El canciller británico James Cleverly dijo que no veía “ninguna razón creíble” por la cual los tribunales considerarían ahora a Ruanda “un país inseguro” para los solicitantes de asilo. El tratado establece los avances realizados para reforzar los sistemas judiciales y de asilo de Ruanda.
El gobierno publicará una legislación separada, prevista para finales de esta semana, que establecería que Ruanda es “un país seguro” para los solicitantes de asilo.En realidad es una autocracia, donde no se respetan los derechos humanos ni la libertad de expresión y sufrió unos de los peores genocidios tribales africanos.
Según la política de Ruanda, cualquier persona que llegue ilegalmente al Reino Unido será elegible para ser expulsada al país centroafricano, donde luego podrá solicitar asilo. No se han realizado vuelos con migrantes debido a las impugnaciones legales , que terminaron en una sentencia del Tribunal Supremo. El mismo declaró ilegal la decisión de Sunak, que no sabe como complacer a la ultraderecha de su partido.
Cleverly no pudo garantizar que los vuelos despegaran antes que se produzcan las elecciones generales en el reino.
Se negó a decir cuánto dinero nuevo se enviaría a Ruanda y negó que esto estuviera relacionado con el tratado. Gran Bretaña ya ha pagado al gobierno de Ruanda 140 millones de libras esterlinas, desde que se acordó por primera vez el plan en abril de 2022.
El Dr. Vincent Biruta, ministro de Asuntos Exteriores de Ruanda, dijo que su país había sido “tratado injustamente” por los tribunales británicos. Sugirió que la “política interna del Reino Unido” podría haber desempeñado un papel en el bloqueo de la política de asilo original.
¿Qué dice el acuerdo?
El tratado garantiza que los migrantes enviados a Ruanda no serán devueltos a su país de origen, un proceso conocido como devolución. Es la razón central por la que la Corte Suprema dictaminó que el plan era ilegal el mes pasado.
Se creará un organismo especial de apelación para escuchar las apelaciones individuales de los inmigrantes, cuyas solicitudes de asilo sean rechazadas por el sistema de asilo de Ruanda. El organismo estará compuesto por jueces de una mezcla de nacionalidades, con experiencia en asilo y protección humanitaria. El Ministerio del Interior dijo que esto «reforzará aún más las garantías de que las personas reubicadas no serán devueltas».
A los inmigrantes a quienes se les rechace asilo en Ruanda se les ofrecerán rutas alternativas para permanecer en el país, según el plan. Pero podrán salir voluntariamente. El tratado otorga una base legal al acuerdo preexistente, alcanzado con Ruanda en abril de 2022.
Se creará un comité de seguimiento independiente para garantizar que ambos países cumplan con los términos del tratado. Evaluará las condiciones que enfrentan los migrantes a su llegada a Ruanda, el procesamiento de sus solicitudes de asilo y su tratamiento y apoyo durante el período de cinco años posterior a la decisión sobre su solicitud.
El comité estará formado por ocho miembros independientes. Pero el Ministerio del Interior aún no ha revelado quiénes serán.
También habrá un sistema de denuncia, que permitirá a los inmigrantes presentar denuncias confidenciales. Desarrollado por el comité de seguimiento, tendrá el poder de establecer áreas prioritarias para el seguimiento y tendrá acceso ilimitado para que los migrantes puedan completar evaluaciones e informes.
Dudas por los plazos
Cuando se le preguntó si Gran Bretaña podría garantizar que los vuelos despegarían para las próximas elecciones, Cleverly dijo: “Queremos que esta parte de nuestro plan migratorio más amplio esté en funcionamiento lo más rápido posible. Creemos firmemente que este tratado aborda todas las cuestiones de sus señorías en la Corte Suprema”.
Dijo que «no ve ninguna razón creíble» para cuestionar el historial de Ruanda, añadiendo que la nueva legislación interna llegará «pronto».
Cuando se le preguntó si el tratado implicaba nuevos pagos a Ruanda, Cleverly añadió: “Permítanme dejarlo claro. El gobierno de Ruanda no ha solicitado ni hemos proporcionado ninguna financiación relacionada con la firma de este tratado.
“El acuerdo financiero ,que inevitablemente forma parte de un acuerdo internacional, refleja los costos que pueden imponerse a Ruanda a través de los cambios que esta asociación ha creado en sus sistemas: en sus sistemas legales y sus instituciones” dijo el canciller británico .»Abordar la migración es importante y no es una opción gratuita, pero consideramos que es lo correcto».
INTERNACIONAL
Una codiciada Groenlandia va a las urnas con ánimos independentistas y con Trump al acecho
Las encuestan muestran apoyo a la independencia
Una inmensa isla acapara los focos
INTERNACIONAL
El primer ministro de Portugal perdió una moción de confianza y cayó el gobierno
INTERNACIONAL
They were forced to scam others worldwide; now thousands are detained on the Burmese border
Thousands of sick, exhausted and terrified young men and women, from countries all over the world squat in rows, packed shoulder to shoulder, surgical masks covering their mouths and eyes.
Their nightmare was supposed to be over.
UN WARNS OF ‘FRIGHTENING AND DISTURBING’ ACTIVITY BY MILITARY, REBELS IN WESTERN BURMA
Last month, a dramatic and highly publicized operation by Thai, Chinese and Myanmar authorities led to the release of more than 7,000 people from locked compounds in Myanmar where they were forced to trick Americans and others out of their life savings. But survivors have found themselves trapped once again, this time in overcrowded facilities with no medical care, limited food and no idea when they’ll be sent home.
One young man from India said about 800 people were being held in the same facility as him, sharing 10 dirty toilets. He said many of the people there were feverish and coughing. Like all former enslaved scammers who talked to The Associated Press, he spoke on condition of anonymity out of concern for his safety.
«If we die here with health issues, who is responsible for that?» he asked.
The armed groups who are holding the survivors, as well as Thai officials across the border, say they are awaiting action from the detainees’ home governments.
It’s one of the largest potential rescues of forced laborers in modern history, but advocates say the first major effort to crack down on the cyber scam industry has turned into a growing humanitarian crisis.
The people released are just a small fraction of what could be 300,000 people working in similar scam operations across the region, according to an estimate from the United States Institute of Peace. Human rights groups and analysts add that the networks that run these illegal scams will continue to operate unless much broader action is taken against them.
A high-profile crackdown
The trapped people, some of whom are highly educated and fluent in English, were initially lured to Thailand with promises of lucrative office jobs, only to find themselves locked in buildings where they describe being forced to sit at computers up to 16 hours a day running scams. Refusing to work could bring beatings, starvation and electric shocks.
People from China, Vietnam and Ethiopia, believed to have been trafficked and forced to work in scam centers, sit with their faces masked while in detention after being released from the centers in Myawaddy district in eastern Myanmar, Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Thanaphon Wuttison)
«Your passport is confiscated, you cannot go outside and everything is like hell, a living hell,» a trapped Pakistani man told The Associated Press.
Cyber scams run from compounds have flourished during the pandemic, targeting people around the world. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crimes estimates that between $18 billion and $37 billion was lost in Asia alone in 2023, with minimal government action against the criminal industry’s spread.
Beijing began pushing the region’s governments to crack down this year after a young Chinese actor was trafficked to Myanmar by people who promised him an acting job in Thailand. His girlfriend spearheaded a viral social media campaign that led to his release.
Following that rescue, a senior Chinese government official visited Thailand and Myanmar demanding an end to the scams. In response, Thailand cut electricity, internet and gas supplies to five border towns in Myanmar.
Shortly after, the ethnic militia groups that rule this part of Myanmar — the Kayin Border Guard Force and the Democratic Kayin Buddhist Army — asked some of the trapped scammers if they wanted to leave, and then escorted them out of their compounds.
From forced labor to detention
As the number of people released grew into the thousands, formerly enslaved scammers found themselves caught in indefinite detention just across a narrow, slow-moving river’s width from freedom.
Most are being held either in army camps controlled by the Kayin Border Guard Force, or repurposed scam compounds, where many have been since early February.
For weeks, men and women have shared unsanitary conditions, sleeping on the floor and eating what their captors provide. At one point, the Border Guard Force said that over 7,000 people were crammed into these facilities, as China began busing citizens across the border for flights.
Exclusive photos obtained by AP underscore the detainees’ desperation: Surgical masks, often two per face, cover their eyes, noses and mouths as they huddle under the watchful eyes of armed guards.
«It felt like a blessing that we came out of that trap, but the actual thing is that every person just wants to go back home,» said another Indian man, 24, speaking softly on a contraband phone from inside a makeshift detention center. He asked to not publish his name out of concern for his safety and because the militias guarding them had confiscated their phones.
Last week, fights broke out between Chinese citizens waiting to go home and the security forces guarding them, two detainees told the AP.
An unconfirmed list provided by authorities in Myanmar says they’re holding citizens from 29 countries including Philippines, Kenya and the Czech Republic.
Waiting for a $600 plane ticket
Authorities in Thailand say they cannot allow foreigners to cross the border from Myanmar unless they can be sent home immediately, leaving many to wait for help from embassies that has been long in coming.
China sent a chartered flight Thursday to the tiny Mae Sot airport to pick up a group of its citizens, but few other governments have matched that. There are roughly 130 Ethiopians waiting in a Thai military base, stuck for want of a $600 plane ticket. Dozens of Indonesians were bused out one morning last week, pushing suitcases and carrying plastic bags with their meager possessions as they headed to Bangkok for a flight home.
Thai officials held a meeting this week with representatives from foreign embassies, promising to move «as quickly as possible» to allow them to rescue their trapped citizens. But they warned that Thailand can only manage to receive 300 people per day, down from 500 previously, Monday through Fridays. It also announced it would let embassy staff cross over into Myanmar.
«The ministry attaches very high importance to this and is aware that there are sick people, and that they need to be repatriated,» Nikorndej Balankura, spokesman for Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Thursday.
The Indian Embassy in Bangkok did not respond to requests for comment. The Czech Foreign Ministry says it cannot confirm a Czech citizen is among those repatriated. It says it is in touch with the embassies in Bangkok and Yangon over the issue and that the embassies have not been asked for assistance.
Amy Miller, the Southeast Asia director of Acts of Mercy International who is based at the Thai-Myanmar border, says it’s hard for the world to understand why all of the released workers aren’t free.
«You can literally, with your naked eye, stand at the border and see people inside, on their balconies, in these compounds, and yet we cannot reach them,» she said. Pausing a moment, she gestured out a nearby window toward the Friendship Bridge to Myanmar just blocks away. «I think what people don’t understand is that to enter into another country is an act of war. You cannot just go in and receive these people out.»
Assistance is scarce
Aiding the work on the front lines, especially for those countries with fewer resources, are a handful of small nonprofit groups with very limited funds.
In a nondescript Mae Sot home, Miller’s organization receives escapees and a trickle of survivors who have made it across the river with comfortable couches, clean water, food and working phones to reach their families. She said today’s unprecedented numbers are overwhelming the aid available across the river.
«When we’re looking at numbers in the thousands, the ability to get them over to Thailand and process them and house them and feed them would be impossible for most governments,» said Miller. «It really does require a kind of a global response.»
The recent abrupt halt to U.S. foreign aid funding has made it even harder to get help to released scam center workers.
The United Nations’ International Organization for Migration, for example, previously funded care for victims of trafficking in scam compounds in one shelter in Cambodia, but was forced to halt that work by the Trump Administration’s funding freeze announced in January, according to a source with direct knowledge of the situation. The halt to funding has also impacted a network of civil society groups that worked to stop human trafficking and rescue survivors in Thailand.
«It’s really heartbreaking to see that there’s such an immense amount of people that are in need of assistance,» said Saskia Kok, Head of Protection Unit in Thailand for the IOM.
In a statement, U.S. officials acknowledged the high pressure impasse.
«The United States remains deeply concerned about online scam operations throughout Southeast Asia, which affect thousands of Americans and individuals from many other countries,» said a State Department spokesperson in a statement sent to the AP.
A bigger problem
While advocates estimate some 50 million people are living in modern slavery, mass rescues of enslaved workers are rare. In 2015, more than 2,000 fishermen were rescued from brutal conditions at sea, liberated after an Associated Press investigation exposed their plight. That same year hundreds of Indians were rescued from brick factories in India. And last year Brazilian prosecutors rescued 163 Chinese nationals working in «slavery-like» conditions at an electric vehicle factory construction site in northeastern Brazil.
«What we are seeing at the Thai-Myanmar border now is the result of years of inaction on a trafficking crisis that has had a devastating impact on thousands of people, many of whom were simply seeking better economic prospect, but were lured to these compounds on false pretenses,» said Amnesty International Myanmar researcher Joe Freeman.
Being forced to commit a crime under threat of violence should not be criminalized, said Freeman. «However, in general we are aware of countries in the region repatriating their nationals from scam compounds only to then charge them with crimes.»
Business as usual
It’s not clear how much of an effect these releases will have on the criminal groups that run the scam centers.
February marked the third time the Thais have cut internet or electricity to towns across the river. Each time, the compounds have managed to work around the cuts. Large compounds have access to diesel-powered generators, as well as access to internet provider Starlink, experts working with law enforcement say.
«The resources is the one thing that they are not lacking and they’ve been able to bring them to bear in the past,» said Benedikt Hoffman, acting representative for the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in the region.
The armed groups that staged the crackdown have also been accused of helping to run scam compounds in Myawaddy. The head of the Kayin Border Guard Force, General Saw Chit Thu, has been sanctioned by the European Union and the United Kingdom for profiting from scam compounds and human trafficking, respectively. Compounds in the DKBA’s control are less well-documented in the public record, but activists say they also control a fair number.
«There is clearly a lot of pressure on the Border Guard Force to take action and helping people to leave is one of the most visible ways to do so,» Hoffman said. «That said, it likely also reflects an adjustment to the business model, reducing the number of people involved — and with less attention, continuing lower key operations.»
It will take simultaneous pressure exerted in multiple areas to truly shut down the compounds, said Hoffman.
In this crackdown, there have been no major prosecutions or compounds shut down.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
«This doesn’t affect anything,» said a 23-year-old Pakistani man who had hoped to be freed only to be trapped in an army camp. The bosses, he said, are «rich as hell» and can buy anything they need to keep the lucrative operations going. Meanwhile, he said, conditions are worsening.
«My friends are in really bad condition, we can’t survive here,» he said, requesting anonymity out of fear for retribution from his guards. He asks a question that’s been haunting him day in and day out for weeks: «Is anyone coming for us?»
-
POLITICA3 días ago
Documentos oficiales: la Argentina enfrenta 236 demandas fuera del país por más de US$27.000 millones
-
POLITICA2 días ago
El número de muertos por las inundaciones en Bahía Blanca subió a 15
-
POLITICA2 días ago
El Gobierno acusó al kirchnerismo de agitar los reclamos sociales para desestabilizar