US may sanction four countries for refusing deportees

US may sanction four countries for refusing deportees

File photo: Illegal Rohingya migrants from Myanmar, rounded up in Rattaphum district, Songkhla, in May 2015. (Photo by Wichayant Boonchote)
File photo: Illegal Rohingya migrants from Myanmar, rounded up in Rattaphum district, Songkhla, in May 2015. (Photo by Wichayant Boonchote)

WASHINGTON - The United States could impose additional penalties on four countries that are not cooperating with requests to take back their citizens, a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesman said Wednesday.

The State Department and the DHS can sanction countries that do not cooperate with removals, but have used that punishment authority only twice in the past 15 years. 

The current 12 countries deemed recalcitrant are China, Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, Iran, Cambodia, Myanmar, Morocco, Hong Kong, South Sudan, Guinea and Eritrea.

Acting DHS secretary Elaine Duke sent a letter to the State Department last week identifying the latest four countries that could face the new penalties.

DHS spokesman David Lapan declined to discuss possible sanctions or the names of the four countries that could face additional sanctions, including denying them visas.

However, CNN cited a DHS official close to the discussions as saying on Wednesday the four under consideration are Cambodia, Eritrea, Guinea and Sierra Leone.

In two cases since 2000, the United States halted issuing visas to government officials and their families from Guinea and Gambia.

Mr Lapan said in some cases the DHS had no choice but to release some convicted criminals who served prison time but could not be returned to their home country because their home government refused to cooperate.

"We have tens of thousands of individuals," he said.

The DHS identifies countries that can be sanctioned and the State Department decides what, if any, sanctions could be imposed.

The DHS has said that it has final deportation orders against 35,000 Cuban citizens with criminal histories who Cuba refuses to accept.

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