'Unquestionably in violation': Judge says US government didn't follow court order on deportations

FILE - In this Sunday, July 10, 2011 file photo, Southern Sudanese wave the national flag in the capital Juba. (AP Photo/Pete Muller, File)

The United States once cheered the creation of South Sudan as an independent nation. Now the U.S. is being asked to explain why it appears to be deporting migrants from as far away as Vietnam to a chaotic country that's once again in danger of collapsing into civil war.

A U.S. judge ordered Trump administration officials to Wednesday to answer questions.

If the deportations are confirmed, that means people from Vietnam, Cuba and elsewhere are being sent to a nation they have no link to, thousands of miles from where they want to be. Vietnam's list of its embassies in Africa shows the closest one to South Sudan is in Tanzania, over 800 miles away.

South Sudan鈥檚 police spokesperson, Maj. Gen. James Monday Enoka, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that no migrants had arrived in the country and that if they do, they would be investigated and again 鈥渞edeported to their correct country鈥 if found not to be South Sudanese.

Recently, the Trump administration , saying the country鈥檚 government failed to accept the return of its citizens 鈥渋n a timely manner.鈥 South Sudan pushed back, saying the person in question was Congolese, but later said 鈥渋n the spirit of maintaining friendly relations鈥 with the U.S.

South Sudan鈥檚 government has struggled since independence from Sudan in 2011 to deliver many of the basic services of a state. Years of conflict have left the country heavily reliant on aid that has been hit hard by another Trump administration decision 鈥 .

Here鈥檚 a look at South Sudan, whose own people had been granted U.S. temporary protected status because of insecurity at home.

A deadly divide

The euphoria of independence turned to civil war two years later, when rival factions backing President Salva Kiir and deputy Riek Machar opened fire on each other in South Sudan鈥檚 capital, Juba, in 2013.

The two men鈥檚 tensions have been so much at the heart of the country鈥檚 insecurity that the late Pope Francis once took the extraordinary step of in a plea for lasting peace.

Five years of civil war killed hundreds of thousands of people. A peace deal reached in 2018 has been fragile and not fully implemented, to the frustration of the U.S. and other international backers. South Sudan still hasn鈥檛 held a long-delayed presidential election, and Kiir remains in power.

His rivalry with Machar is compounded by ethnic divisions. Machar has long regarded himself as destined for the presidency, citing a prophecy years ago by a seer from his ethnic group.

Earlier this year, the threat of war returned. and allies in the government and military were detained following a major escalation that included and an attack on a Machar鈥檚 opposition party announced South Sudan鈥檚 peace deal was effectively over.

鈥淟et鈥檚 not mince words: What we are seeing is darkly reminiscent of the 2013 and 2016 civil wars, which killed 400,000 people,鈥 .

Some Western countries have closed their embassies there while others, have reduced embassy staff. The U.S. Embassy's travel warning said that 鈥渧iolent crime, such as carjackings, shootings, ambushes, assaults, robberies, and kidnappings are common throughout South Sudan, including Juba.鈥

A country in disarray

The Trump administration鈥檚 pressure on South Sudan to take in deportees, including foreign ones, is in sharp contrast to Washington鈥檚 past warm embrace as its rebel leaders 鈥 including Kiir and Machar 鈥 fought for independence.

Now there is less support than ever for most of South Sudan's over 11 million people because of the cuts in U.S. aid.

Climate shocks including flooding have long caused and . South Sudan鈥檚 health and education systems were already among the weakest in the world. Aid organizations had offered essential help.

South Sudan's government has long relied on oil production, but little money from that is seen, in part because of . Conflict in neighboring Sudan has affected landlocked South Sudan鈥檚 oil exports. Civil servants at times go months without being paid.

How South Sudan is equipped to handle migrants arriving abruptly from the U.S. is yet to be seen.

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