US President Donald Trump has launched a crackdown on migrants since coming to power in January, deporting hundreds of people to Latin America that his administration has branded as “gangsters.”
“For the first time in these flights… someone of weight arrives who has been claimed by the Venezuelan justice system,” said Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello.
The minister added that the man was “not from Tren de Aragua,” referring to the Venezuelan gang that Washington branded a “foreign terrorist organisation” and claims many of the deported Venezuelan migrants belong to.
Cabello received the migrants at the Maiquetia International Airport that serves Caracas.
“He belongs to a gang from Trujillo state, the gang… El Cagon,” Cabello added, without offering further details on the criminal’s identity.
Cabello said that of the migrants received by Venezuela so far, none were members of Tren de Aragua.
Venezuela and the United States broke off diplomatic relations in 2019, but had a rapprochement in January to agree on deportation flights.
That cooperation was interrupted for a month after Washington cracked down on Venezuela’s oil sector, but flights resumed a week ago.
Sunday’s flight was the third to land since the resumption.
In total, 918 people have arrived in Venezuela after being deported from the United States.
Another 553 migrants have returned from Mexico, although it was unclear whether they were originally deported from US soil.
According to the United Nations, almost eight million Venezuelans have left their country, fleeing an economic crisis that began to show signs of recovery in 2021.
The government claims that more than 1.2 million have returned. (AFP)
US President Donald Trump has launched a crackdown on migrants since coming to power in January, deporting hundreds of people to Latin America that his administration has branded as “gangsters.”
“For the first time in these flights… someone of weight arrives who has been claimed by the Venezuelan justice system,” said Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello.
The minister added that the man was “not from Tren de Aragua,” referring to the Venezuelan gang that Washington branded a “foreign terrorist organisation” and claims many of the deported Venezuelan migrants belong to.
Cabello received the migrants at the Maiquetia International Airport that serves Caracas.
“He belongs to a gang from Trujillo state, the gang… El Cagon,” Cabello added, without offering further details on the criminal’s identity.
Cabello said that of the migrants received by Venezuela so far, none were members of Tren de Aragua.
Venezuela and the United States broke off diplomatic relations in 2019, but had a rapprochement in January to agree on deportation flights.
That cooperation was interrupted for a month after Washington cracked down on Venezuela’s oil sector, but flights resumed a week ago.
Sunday’s flight was the third to land since the resumption.
In total, 918 people have arrived in Venezuela after being deported from the United States.
Another 553 migrants have returned from Mexico, although it was unclear whether they were originally deported from US soil.
According to the United Nations, almost eight million Venezuelans have left their country, fleeing an economic crisis that began to show signs of recovery in 2021.
The government claims that more than 1.2 million have returned. (AFP)