Colombia Accepts Deportation of Migrants After Diplomatic Dispute with US

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Colombia Accepts Deportation of Migrants After Diplomatic Dispute with US
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Deportation flights between the US and Colombia resumed following a dispute triggered by President Trump's threat of tariffs. Colombian migrants returning home described being shackled on earlier US flights, prompting President Petro to demand their repatriation on Colombian aircraft.

Deportation flights between the United States and Colombia resumed on Tuesday, following a dispute between the two countries that nearly led to a trade war. Colombia n migrants returning home on Colombia n military flights described being shackled during earlier U.S. flights that were blocked by their country’s leader, President Gustavo Petro .

The dispute arose after President Trump threatened to impose 25% tariffs on Colombian exports and other sanctions if Colombia did not accept the deportation of its nationals. Colombia initially rejected the U.S. demands, arguing that the migrants deserved to be treated with dignity and that the flights should be conducted on Colombian military aircraft.Two Colombian air force planes landed Tuesday in Bogota with more than 200 of the migrants, many of them women and children. President Petro welcomed them with a post on X saying they are now “free” and “in a country that loves them.” Trump’s tariff threat worked on Colombia, but his plans for Canada and Mexico carry higher stakes. One of the migrants, José Montaña of Medellín, said they were put in chains on the earlier U.S. flights. “We were shackled from our feet, our ankles to our hips, like criminals,” Montaña said. “There were women whose kids had to see their moms shackled like they were drug traffickers.” Some of the migrants told journalists they had been in the United States for less than two weeks, spending most of their time in detention centers. “We went for the American dream, and we ended up living the American nightmare” said Carlos Gómez, a migrant from the city of Barranquilla who left Colombia two weeks ago, flew to Mexico, and crossed the border illegally into California, with the help of smugglers

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