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Vietnamese man deported from U.S. to South Sudan is repatriated after months in detention

JUBA, South Sudan (AP) 鈥 A Vietnamese national deported to by the Trump administration under its controversial was repatriated to Vietnam on Friday after spending more than a year in detention.

South Sudan鈥檚 Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced the repatriation of 44-year-old Tuan Phan at a press briefing on Friday.

鈥淲e are grateful that while in our custody Mr. Phan was very disciplined, joyful, and importantly, he remained healthy,鈥 said spokesperson Agok Anyar.

Phan and seven other men were sent to Africa in May 2025, rerouted first to a U.S. military base in Djibouti after a federal judge blocked their deportation to South Sudan midflight, citing procedural irregularities. They arrived in Juba, South Sudan鈥檚 capital, aboard a military aircraft in July 2025 after a Supreme Court ruling greenlit their removal.

The eight men all have criminal convictions in the U.S. but had served their prison sentences when they were taken into custody last year.

At least seven African countries have agreed to accept deportees who are not their own citizens as part of arrangements with the U.S., which in exchange has agreed to pay millions of dollars to those governments.

More than 180 people have been sent to those countries, according to the monitoring initiative Third Country Deportation Watch.

The choice of South Sudan as a receiving nation was particularly controversial given its exceptionally poor human rights record, high levels of corruption and growing political instability. displaced more than half a million people in 2025, according to the United Nations.

Phan is the second person in the group to be repatriated after was flown to Mexico in September. Dian Peter Domach, the only South Sudanese national in the group, was released upon his arrival, officials said. The remaining men are from Cuba, Myanmar, and Laos.

Phan moved to the U.S. as a child in 1991, court documents show. In 2000, shortly after turning eighteen, he received a 25-year prison sentence after he shot and killed someone during a gang altercation. His removal from the U.S. was ordered in 2009, and he was taken into custody by Immigration and Customs Enforcement immediately after completing his sentence in March 2025.

In Juba, the deportees were held in a gated house under supervision by armed guards, according to a U.S. Senate report. A congressional aide who visited Juba last year was the first person other than a South Sudanese official to visit the men, the report says.

Michael Bochenek, a senior counsel for Human Rights Watch, said that the lack of visits means 鈥渢here鈥檚 been no independent check on people鈥檚 treatment and conditions of confinement and raises serious questions about South Sudan鈥檚 compliance with human rights norms and essential safeguards against abuses in detention.鈥

While the details of deals made between the U.S. and other governments to accept deportees have been made public, the conditions of the South Sudan arrangement remain murky.

State Department documents made public show that South Sudan made requests to the U.S. after agreeing to accept the men, including sanctions relief for a former top official and support with the prosecution of a prominent opposition leader.

It is unclear what South Sudan’s government was paid or what it received in return.

___ Falzetta reported from Nairobi, Kenya.

Copyright © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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