India 'engaging with US' after shackled deportees spark anger

Cherylann Mollan
BBC News, Mumbai
Reuters US military plane in AmritsarReuters
The US military plane carrying Indian deportees landed in Amritsar on Wednesday

India's Foreign Minister S Jaishankar has told parliament the government is working with the US to ensure Indian citizens are not mistreated while being deported.

His statement came a day after a US military flight brought back 104 Indians accused of entering the US illegally.

One of the deportees told the BBC they had been handcuffed throughout the 40-hour flight, sparking criticism.

But Jaishankar said he had been told by the US that women and children were not restrained. Deportation flights to India had been taking place for several years and US procedures allowed for the use of restraints, he added.

Deportation in the US is organised and executed by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

"We have been informed by ICE that women and children are not restrained," Jaishankar said.

He added that according to ICE, the needs of deportees during transit, including for food and medical attention, were attended to and deportees could be unrestrained during bathroom breaks.

"There has been no change from past procedure," he added.

However Jaspal Singh, one of the deportees on the flight that landed in Amritsar city in the state of Punjab on Wednesday, told BBC Punjabi that he was shackled throughout the flight.

"We were tortured in many ways. My hands and feet were tied after we were put on the plane. The plane stopped at several places," he said, adding that he was unshackled only after the plane landed in Amritsar.

BBC/Gurpreet Chawla A photo of Jaspal SinghBBC/Gurpreet Chawla
Jaspal Singh spent 11 days in the US before he was deported

The US has not given further details of how deportees were treated on the flight. Officials have said that enforcing immigration laws is "critically important to the national security and public safety of the United States" and it was US policy to "faithfully execute the immigration laws against all inadmissible and removable aliens".

The US border patrol chief posted video showing deportees in shackles, saying the deportation flight to India was the "farthest deportation flight yet using military transport".

President Donald Trump has made the mass deportation of undocumented foreign nationals a key policy. The US is said to have identified about 18,000 Indian nationals it believes entered illegally.

Trump has said India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi had assured him that the country would "do what's right" in accepting US deportations.

In his statement on Thursday, Jaishankar said all countries had an obligation to take back their nationals who had entered other countries illegally. They often faced dangerous journeys and inhumane working conditions once they had reached their destinations, he said.

Fraudulent Indian travel agencies are known to take huge sums of money from people desperate to travel abroad for work, and then make them undertake dangerous journeys to avoid being caught by immigration officials.

Jaspal said he had taken a loan of 4m rupees ($46,000; £37,000] to travel to the US, a dangerous journey that took months and during which he saw bodies in the jungle of other migrants who had died on the route.

Watch: What to know about Trump's migrant deportation flights

Opposition leaders have condemned the manner in which migrants were brought back to the country and have asked the government what action it plans to take over the treatment meted out to its citizens.

Congress MP Manickam Tagore called it "shocking and shameful".

"The way the US is deporting Indians - chained like criminals - is inhumane and unacceptable," he posted on X.

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor said the US had the right to deport people who had entered the country illegally but criticised the manner in which they were deported.

"To send them like this abruptly in a military aircraft and in handcuffs is an insult to India, it's an insult to the dignity of Indians," he said.

This isn't the first time that the US has faced the ire of politicians for allegedly mistreating migrants from their countries.

Last month, Brazil's government expressed outrage after about 88 of its nationals arrived in their homeland handcuffed. The government said that it would demand an explanation from Washington over the "degrading treatment of passengers on the flight".

Meanwhile, Colombia sent its own planes to collect deportees after Colombian President Gustavo Petro barred US military aircraft from landing, arguing that those on board were being treated like criminals.

Rights groups have urged countries to ensure deportees are treated humanely.

Additional reporting by Gurpreet Chawla, BBC Punjabi