logo
Venezuelan makeup artist returns home, describes torture during El Salvador detention

Venezuelan makeup artist returns home, describes torture during El Salvador detention

Reuters23-07-2025
CAPACHO, Venezuela, July 23 (Reuters) - A makeup artist who became the face of more than 250 Venezuelan migrants deported by the U.S. to El Salvador's most notorious prison arrived home to his family on Wednesday after what he described as "an encounter with torture and death."
Andry Hernandez, 32, and the other detainees returned to Venezuela on Friday as part of a prisoner exchange, after spending four months in El Salvador's CECOT prison, where they and the Venezuelan government allege they were beaten, shot with rubber projectiles, held in dark cells, and served rotten food.
"Many of our fellows have wounds from the nightsticks; they have fractured ribs, fractured fingers and toes, marks from the handcuffs, others have marks on their chests, on their face ... from the projectiles," Hernandez told journalists at his home in Capacho, near the Colombian border.
U.S. President Donald Trump invoked the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport the men, who his government accuses of being members of the Tren de Aragua gang, without normal immigration procedures.
The deportations sparked a legal battle led by civil rights groups. Families and lawyers of many of the men have denied they have gang ties.
Hernandez, detained at the U.S.-Mexico border during the Biden administration, had an active asylum case when he was deported to CECOT. His case was widely covered in the media.
Advocates in the U.S. have voiced concerns that Hernandez, who is gay, faces risks in Venezuela due to LGBTQ persecution.
The U.S. alleged Tren de Aragua membership based on his tattoos: crowns on his wrists that read "mom" and "dad."
Hernandez denied the allegation.
In a video broadcast on state television on Monday, Hernandez alleged sexual abuse by the guards at CECOT, and Venezuela's attorney general has said his office will investigate El Salvador President Nayib Bukele over alleged abuses.
Bukele's office has not responded to requests for comment on the alleged torture.
White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson has referred allegations of mistreatment to El Salvador's government, while the U.S. Department of Homeland Security dismissed the allegations of abuse on Tuesday, calling the men "criminal, illegal gang members."
Reuters was not able to immediately confirm the abuse allegations.
Hernandez's parents, Felipe Hernandez and Alexi Romero, have been anxiously awaiting his return since Tuesday, when he called to say he was on the way from Caracas, some 820 kilometers (510 miles) away.
Hernandez said he was most happy to see them and his brother, but was also touched to find out that friends and family held vigils on his behalf and campaigned for his return.
"It fills me with so much peace, so much comfort, so much tranquility that I was never alone, from day one. There were many people who worried for me," he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Opposition leaders say ‘democracy in El Salvador has died' after scrapping of presidential term limits
Opposition leaders say ‘democracy in El Salvador has died' after scrapping of presidential term limits

The Guardian

time18 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Opposition leaders say ‘democracy in El Salvador has died' after scrapping of presidential term limits

Activists and opposition leaders have warned that El Salvador is following Venezuela's path towards dictatorship after the Central American country's congress scrapped presidential term limits, paving the way for Nayib Bukele to seek indefinite re-election. 'Democracy in El Salvador has died,' opposition congresswoman Marcela Villatoro declared late on Thursday as the legislature – in which Bukele's Nuevas Ideas party controls 90% of seats – approved the highly controversial constitutional reform, by 57 votes to three. Villatoro accused fellow lawmakers of dealing a 'death blow' to the country's democratic system during the late-night session. 'Today some people applaud this. Tomorrow they will regret it,' she said, comparing El Salvador's slide into authoritarianism to the collapse of Venezuela's democracy. 'When all the orders come from one person and everything revolves around one single person, democracy no longer exists. And when you lose democracy … it takes years to get it back,' Villatoro warned. Loyalists of Bukele – a social media-savvy 44-year-old who once called himself 'the world's coolest dictator' – celebrated the reforms, which will also see presidential terms extended from five years to six and bring the presidential election scheduled for 2029 forward to 2027. The election's second round will also be scrapped. Suecy Callejas, one of 54 Nuevas Ideas lawmakers in El Salvador's 60-seat assembly, tweeted: 'The constitution isn't untouchable. What should be untouchable is the WILL of the people. And today, more than ever, the people are at the centre of our decisions.' Bukele, who is one of Donald Trump's top Latin American allies, was first elected in 2019 and was re-elected last year thanks to widespread public support for his hardline crackdown on gangs, which has seen homicide rates plummet. That three-year clampdown has seen 2% of El Salvador's adult population jailed and due process suspended, and made Bukele a role model for rightwing Latin American politicians grappling with high crime rates, and for members of Trump's Maga movement. But Bukele's concentration of power has horrified opposition politicians and activists. Juanita Goebertus, Human Rights Watch's Americas director, compared El Salvador's scrapping of presidential term limits to Venezuela's 2009 referendum, which approved the same measure under its then populist president Hugo Chávez. Sixteen years later, Chávez's heir, Nicolás Maduro, remains in power, having claimed a third term last year despite apparently losing the July 2024 election. '[El Salvador is] traveling down the same path as Venezuela,' Goebertus warned. 'It starts with a leader who uses his popularity to concentrate power, and it ends in dictatorship.' In a rare interview with the foreign media last year, Bukele said he would not seek re-election, citing the constitutional 'prohibition' which was this week removed. 'Also, we have an agreement with my wife that this is my last term,' Bukele told Time magazine, musing that he might write a book after leaving power. Few believe Bukele will honour that pledge. 'Welcome to the club of the authoritarian dictatorships of Maduro, [Daniel] Ortega, [Miguel] Díaz Canel,' tweeted Carlos Fernando Chamorro, a prominent Nicaraguan journalist forced into exile because of his country's democratic decline.

‘First Amendment has limits': Tom Homan insists that Mahmoud Khalil will be deported
‘First Amendment has limits': Tom Homan insists that Mahmoud Khalil will be deported

The Independent

time39 minutes ago

  • The Independent

‘First Amendment has limits': Tom Homan insists that Mahmoud Khalil will be deported

Donald Trump's border czar is adamant that Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil will still be deported from the country despite several court rulings that have kept the Palestinian activist out of detention. A federal appeals court on Wednesday rejected a request from the Trump administration to re-arrest Khalil and keep him in immigration detention center while he continues to challenge the government's attempts to remove him from the United States. Homan says the administration will continue to appeal. 'We got radical judges just trying to stop the Trump administration from doing our job and enforcing the law,' he told Newsmax on Thursday. He claimed there is 'only one ending' to Khalil's case: 'We detain him and deport him, but regardless, he will be deported.' That same day, the immigration court judge overseeing his case voided her earlier ruling that allowed the government to deport him. Khalil, a prominent student activist against Israel's war in Gaza, was stripped of his green card and arrested in front of his then-pregnant wife in their New York City apartment building on March 8. He was then sent to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in Louisiana, where he was held for more than 100 days and forced to miss the birth of his child. Trump administration officials have accused Khalil of 'antisemitic activities,' allegations Khalil and his legal team have flatly denied. Officials concede that Khalil did not commit any crime, but Secretary of State Marco Rubio has sought to justify Khalil's arrest by claiming that Khalil's presence in the country undermines foreign policy interests to prevent antisemitism. Khalil and his legal team argue his arrest and detention — and attempted removal from the country, which is currently blocked by court order — are retaliatory violations of his First Amendment right to freedom of speech and his Fifth Amendment right to due process of law, among other claims. 'Look, First Amendment rights have a limitation, too,' Homan told Newsmax. 'He did a lot of bad things. We're going to hold him accountable. He will be deported.' On June 11, a federal judge granted Khalil's release from ICE detention on bail while legal challenges against his arrest and threat of removal from the country continue in both federal and immigration courts. New Jersey District Judge Michael Farbiarz ruled that the administration had unconstitutionally wielded the law against Khalil, whose 'career and reputation are being damaged and his speech is being chilled,' the judge wrote. The government has 'little or no interest in applying the relevant underlying statutes in what is likely an unconstitutional way,' Farbiarz added. 'Mahmoud spent 104 days in detention as punishment for speaking out for Palestinian rights,' ACLU senior staff attorney Noor Zafar said in a statement after this week's appeals court ruling. 'That is time with his family that he will never get back, but this decision affirms that he will remain free and that the government cannot pursue his removal based on the likely unconstitutional foreign policy charge as his case moves through appeal,' she added. 'We will not stand by and allow the government to weaponize immigration law to suppress lawful political speech.' Khalil's attorneys have also argued that the administration's secondary basis for his arrest and removal — allegations that he lied in immigration paperwork — are similarly retaliatory and violate his First Amendment and Fifth Amendment due process rights. The White House continues to insist that Khalil can still be deported on those grounds. White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson told The Independent on Friday that 'Khalil was given the privilege of coming to America to study on a student visa he obtained by fraud and misrepresentation.' 'Despite the lower court judge's wishes to the contrary, the executive branch has the lawful authority to take actions that will protect America's foreign policy interests and promote the overall welfare of the public,' she added. 'The Trump Administration looks forward to ultimate victory on the issue.'

Canada working with US to deal with countries slow to accept deportees, document shows
Canada working with US to deal with countries slow to accept deportees, document shows

Reuters

time40 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Canada working with US to deal with countries slow to accept deportees, document shows

TORONTO, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Canada is working with the United States to "deal with" countries reluctant to accept deportees as both nations increase efforts to ship migrants back to their home countries, according to a government document seen by Reuters. Since President Donald Trump began his second term in January, the United States has cracked down on migrants in the country illegally. But the U.S. has at times struggled to remove people as quickly as it would like in part because of countries' unwillingness to accept them. As Canada has increased deportations, which reached a decade-high last year, it has also run up against countries reluctant to accept deportees. Canadian officials issued a single-use travel document in June to a Somali man they wanted to deport because Somalia would not provide him with travel documents. In a redacted message to an unknown recipient, cited in a February 28 email, the director general of international affairs for Canada's Immigration Department wrote, "Canada will also continue working with the United States to deal with countries recalcitrant on removals to better enable both Canada and the United States to return foreign nationals to their home countries." The department referred questions about the message to the Canada Border Services Agency, which declined to specify how Canada and the U.S. were cooperating, when the cooperation started, and whether the working relationship had changed this year. "Authorities in Canada and the United States face common impediments to the removal of inadmissible persons, which can include uncooperative foreign governments that refuse the return of their nationals or to issue timely travel documents," an agency spokesperson wrote in an email. "While Canada and the United States do not have a formal bilateral partnership that is specific to addressing this challenge, the Canada Border Services Agency continues to work regularly and closely with United States law enforcement partners on matters of border security." When the email was sent, then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was in his last days in office before being replaced in March by Prime Minister Mark Carney. The Canada-U.S. relationship was strained by Trump's threat of tariffs, which he said were partly a response to migrants illegally entering the U.S. from Canada. The spokesperson added the CBSA has committed to deporting more people, from 18,000 in the last fiscal year to 20,000 in each of the next two years. Immigration has become a contentious topic in Canada as some politicians blame migrants for a housing and cost-of-living crisis. The rise in Canada's deportations largely reflects an increased focus on deporting failed refugee claimants. Refugee lawyers say that could mean some people are sent back to countries where they face danger while they try to contest their deportation. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store