'Welcome to hell': Freed migrants tell of horrors in Salvadoran jail
But after a perilous jungle march, US detention, and long months in a Salvadoran jail surviving riots, beatings and fear, he has returned home a wounded and changed man.
On entering the sweltering Caribbean port of Maracaibo, the first thing Yamarte did after hugging his mother and six-year-old daughter was to burn the baggy white prison shorts he wore during four months of "hell."
"The suffering is over now," said the 29-year-old, enjoying a longed-for moment of catharsis.
Yamarte was one of 252 Venezuelans detained in US President Donald Trump's March immigration crackdown, accused without evidence of gang activity, and deported to El Salvador's notorious Terrorism Confinement Center, known as CECOT.
According to four ex-detainees interviewed by AFP, the months were marked by abuse, violence, spoiled food and legal limbo.
"You are going to die here!" heavily armed guards taunted them on arrival to the maximum security facility east of the capital San Salvador. "Welcome to hell!"
The men had their heads shaved and were issued with prison clothes: a T-shirt, shorts, socks, and white plastic clogs.
Yamarte said a small tuft of hair was left at the nape of his neck, which the guards tugged at.
The Venezuelans were held separately from the local prison population in "Pavilion 8" -- a building with 32 cells, each measuring about 100 square meters (1,076 square feet).
Each cell -- roughly the size of an average two-bedroom apartment -- was designed to hold 80 prisoners.
- 'Carried out unconscious' -
Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele built the prison to house the country's most dangerous gang members in deliberately brutal conditions, drawing constant criticism from rights groups.
Trump's administration paid Bukele $6 million to keep the Venezuelans behind bars.
AFP has unsuccessfully requested a tour of the facility and interviews with CECOT authorities.
Another prisoner, 37-year-old Maikel Olivera, recounted there were "beatings 24 hours a day" and sadistic guards who warned, "You are going to rot here, you're going to be in jail for 300 years."
"I thought I would never return to Venezuela," he said.
For four months, the prisoners had no access to the internet, phone calls, visits from loved ones, or even lawyers.
At least one said he was sexually abused.
The men said they slept mostly on metal cots, with no mattresses to provide comfort.
There were several small, poorly-ventilated cells where prisoners would be locked up for 24 hours at a time for transgressions -- real or imagined.
"There were fellow detainees who couldn't endure even two hours and were carried out unconscious," Yamarte recounted.
The men never saw sunlight and were allowed one shower a day at 4:00 am. If they showered out of turn, they were beaten.
Andy Perozo, 30, told AFP of guards firing rubber bullets and tear gas into the cells.
For a week after one of two riots that were brutally suppressed, "they shot me every morning. It was hell for me. Every time I went to the doctor, they beat me," he said.
Edwuar Hernandez, 23, also told of being beaten at the infirmary.
"They would kick you... kicks everywhere," he said. "Look at the marks; I have marks, I'm all marked."
The detainees killed time playing games with dice made from bits of tortilla dough.
They counted the passing days with notches on a bar of soap.
- 'Out of hell' -
An estimated eight million Venezuelans have fled the political and economic chaos of their homeland to try to find a job in the United States that would allow them to send money home.
Yamarte left in September 2023, making the weeks-long journey on foot through the Darien Gap that separates Colombia from Panama.
It is unforgiving terrain that has claimed the lives of countless migrants who must brave predatory criminal gangs and wild animals.
Yamarte was arrested in Dallas in March and deported three days later, without a court hearing.
All 252 detainees were suddenly, and unexpectedly, freed on July 18 in a prisoner exchange deal between Caracas and Washington.
Now, many are contemplating legal action.
Many of the men believe they were arrested in the United States simply for sporting tattoos wrongly interpreted as proof of association with the feared Tren de Aragua gang.
Yamarte has one that reads: "Strong like Mom."
"I am clean. I can prove it to anyone," he said indignantly, hurt at being falsely accused of being a criminal.
"We went... to seek a better future for our families; we didn't go there to steal or kill."
Yamarte, Perozo, and Hernandez are from the same poor neighborhood of Maracaibo, where their loved ones decorated homes with balloons and banners once news broke of their release.
Yamarte's mom, 46-year-old Mercedes, had prepared a special lunch of steak, mashed potatoes, and fried green plantain.
At her house on Tuesday, the phone rang shortly after Yamarte's arrival.
It was his brother Juan, who works in the United States without papers and moves from place to place to evade Trump's migrant dragnet.
Juan told AFP he just wants to stay long enough to earn the $1,700 he needs to pay off the house he had bought for his wife and child in Venezuela.
"Every day we thought of you, every day," Juan told his brother. "I always had you in my mind, always, always."
"The suffering is over now," replied Mervin. "We've come out of hell."
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The Stockholm talks come hot on the heels of Trump's biggest trade deal yet with the European Union on Sunday for a 15 per cent tariff on most EU goods exports to the US, including autos. The bloc will also buy $US750 billion worth of American energy and make $US600 billion worth of US investments in coming years. No similar breakthrough is expected in the US-China talks but trade analysts said that another 90-day extension of a tariff and export control truce struck in mid-May was likely. An extension of that length would prevent further escalation and facilitate planning for a potential meeting between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping in late October or early November. A US Treasury spokesperson declined comment on a South China Morning Post report quoting unnamed sources as saying the two sides would refrain from introducing new tariffs or other steps that could escalate the trade war for another 90 days. Trump's administration is poised to impose new sectoral tariffs that will impact China within weeks, including on semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, ship-to-shore cranes and other products. "We're very close to a deal with China. We really sort of made a deal with China, but we'll see how that goes," Trump told reporters before European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen struck their tariff deal. Previous US-China trade talks in Geneva and London in May and June focused on bringing US and Chinese retaliatory tariffs down from triple-digit levels and restoring the flow of rare earth minerals halted by China and Nvidia's H20 AI chips and other goods halted by the United States. So far, the talks have not delved into broader economic issues. They include US complaints that China's state-led, export-driven model is flooding world markets with cheap goods, and Beijing's complaints that US national security export controls on tech goods seek to stunt Chinese growth. "Geneva and London were really just about trying to get the relationship back on track so that they could, at some point, actually negotiate about the issues which animate the disagreement between the countries in the first place," said Scott Kennedy, a China economics expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. "I'd be surprised if there is an early harvest on some of these things but an extension of the ceasefire for another 90 days seems to be the most likely outcome." US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng will lead the delegations in Stockholm. Bessent has already flagged a deadline extension and has said he wants China to rebalance its economy away from exports to more domestic consumption - a decades-long goal for US policymakers. In the background of the talks is speculation about a possible meeting between Trump and Xi in late October. 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