Cuban man deported from US to Eswatini goes on hunger strike in prison

A correctional complex in Eswatini. US officials have said the men deported to Eswatini are convicted criminals. Photograph: AP

A Cuban man deported by the Trump administration to the southern African country of Eswatini has started a hunger strike against his detention there, his lawyer said on Wednesday.

Roberto Mosquera del Peral was among five third-country nationals deported from the US to Eswatini, formerly Swaziland, in July.

They have been held in a maximum-security prison along with 10 others deported in October, after a broader ramp-up in third-country removals under the US president’s immigration crackdown.

US officials have said the men deported to Eswatini are convicted criminals. Their lawyers say all of them had finished serving their sentences in the US and that there was no legal basis to imprison them again.

“My client is arbitrarily detained and now his life is on the line,” Alma David, Mosquera del Peral’s US-based attorney, said in a statement, adding that had begun the hunger strike on 15 October.

A spokesperson for Eswatini’s correctional services department had no immediate comment but said he would review the information.

The US Department of Homeland Security wrote on X in June that Mosquera del Peral, 58, had been arrested by immigration authorities in Miami. It said his criminal history included convictions for homicide, aggravated assault on a police officer and aggravated battery.

His attorney David said this was incorrect. She said he had been convicted of attempted murder, not murder, and had finished his sentence before he was deported. She demanded that he be permitted to meet his lawyer in Eswatini.

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A local attorney acting on behalf of the deportees has been engaged in a legal battle to gain access to them, which the Eswatini government has so far refused.