Eleven individuals, deported from the US to Ghana last month, filed a lawsuit against the Ghana government, alleging that they were illegally held in a military detention camp.
The legal action reflects the chaotic fallout following the deportations, which have resulted in deportees being scattered and “dumped” into neighboring African countries. The deportees represent multiple West African nationalities, none of which is Ghanaian.
“The initial 14 [deportees] were brought to Ghana on September 6. Three were deported [from Ghana] that night. Eleven were held in military detention. Out of that 11, 10 were deported with the matter in court, and eight of them are in Togo,” lead lawyer Oliver Barker-Vormawor explained to media outlets.
The deportations arose from a “third country deportation” agreement between the US and Ghana earlier this year. Ghana’s parliamentary minority party has now called for its suspension as leaders claim the government entered into the agreement without proper legislative approval. Samuel Abu Jinapor, Ranking Foreign Affairs Committee Member, reportedly argued that:
The government’s conduct in operationalizing the agreement with the United States without parliamentary ratification is a direct constitutional violation of Article 75 and an affront to the authority of the [Ghanan] Supreme Court. It is therefore deeply concerning that the government continues to operationalize the agreement despite this flagrant operational breach.
Ghana’s Foreign Minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, told local media that the decision to enter into the agreement was not a signal of support for the US, but rather a decision “grounded purely on humanitarian principle and Pan-African empathy.” However, reports have claimed that Ablakwa and President John Mahama may also be motivated by the hope that the US will lift travel restrictions on Ghanaians entering the US as consideration for the agreement.
After initial pushback from federal courts, in July, the US Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to enter into third-country deportation agreements with multiple nations, including Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, Panama, Eswatini, Rwanda, South Sudan, and Uganda. International organizations have warned that the policy risks great harm to individuals and skirts government accountability.
The West African deportees filed a lawsuit in the US last month after they were taken from an immigration facility, shackled, placed in straitjackets, and flown to Ghana in a cargo plane without meaningful notice or hearing.