Article

Tuesday, February 11, 2025
search-icon

Venezuela sends 2 planes to US to return migrants

publish time

11/02/2025

publish time

11/02/2025

XAC102
Venezuelan migrants deported from the United States arrive at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela on Feb 10. (AP)

McALLEN, Texas, Feb 11, (AP): Two Venezuelan planes returned home Monday with about 190 Venezuelans deported from the United States, signaling a possible thaw in relations between two longtime diplomatic adversaries and a victory for President Donald Trump in his efforts to get more countries to take their people back.

Deportation flights from the US to Venezuela have been halted for years except for a brief period in October 2023 during the Biden administration. Venezuelans began showing up at the US border with Mexico in large numbers in 2021 and are currently one of the largest nationalities entering illegally, making Venezuela's refusal to take them back a major challenge for the US.

The breakthrough came after Trump envoy Richard Grennell visited Caracas earlier this month. "Flights of Illegal Aliens to Venezuela Resume,” the White House said Monday in a post on the social platform X, saying they were overseen by Grennell. Venezuelan television and radio triumphantly covered the arrival of the Conviasa flights in Caracas from Fort Bliss, a US Army base in El Paso, Texas.

"This is the world we want, a world of peace, understanding, dialogue and cooperation,” said Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro The Venezuelan government confirmed the flights earlier in a statement that took issue with an "ill-intentioned” and "false” narrative around the presence of members of the Tren de Aragua gang in the US.

It said most Venezuelan immigrants are decent, hard-working people and that US officials sought to stigmatize the South American country. Monday's flights came days after the first flights of immigrants to a US military base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and after US Secretary of State Marco Rubio struck agreements with El Salvador and Guatemala for those countries to take people who were not their citizens.

A federal judge in New Mexico on Sunday preemptively blocked the transfer of three Venezuelan men to Guantanamo Bay. In their request for a temporary halt, lawyers for the men said their clients "fit the profile of those the administration has prioritized for detention in Guantanamo, i.e. Venezuelan men detained in the El Paso area with (false) charges of connections with the Tren de Aragua gang.”

Trump wrote after Grennell's visit that the Maduro government had agreed to receive "all Venezuela illegal aliens who were encamped in the US, including gang members of Tren de Aragua," and pay for their transportation. Six Americans held in Venezuela were released at the time.