By Atoyebi Nike

Rwanda has agreed to accept up to 250 migrants deported from the United States under a resettlement deal signed in June. The agreement, a product of the Trump-era immigration crackdown, allows Kigali to vet deportees and offer approved individuals access to housing, healthcare, and job training.

While Rwandan officials say their country’s history of displacement motivates the decision, human rights advocates have raised concerns about the ethics of third-country resettlement schemes.

The U.S. will fund the programme through a grant, though the financial terms remain undisclosed. Only migrants without active criminal cases will be eligible, and participation remains voluntary—deportees can leave Rwanda if they wish.

This is not Rwanda’s first attempt at positioning itself as a migration hub. In 2022, it signed a similar, now-defunct agreement with the UK, which faced widespread legal and political challenges.

Critics continue to view such arrangements as deflecting responsibility and risking migrants’ rights, but Kigali maintains that its resettlement efforts are both humane and structured.

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