UN After a month in a Costa Rican shelter, many deported from the U.S. still have no home - “We are not free to go outside of here. Here, it’s like a jail,” said one migrant from Afghanistan. “The children, they cry every day. They cry.”

After a month in a Costa Rican shelter, many deported from the U.S. still have no home
NBC News (archive.ph)
By Ronny Rojas, Noticias Telemundo, and Kimmy Yam
2025-04-01 21:35:49GMT

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Mohammad Saber Asadi, who fled Afghanistan with his wife, Najia, and their almost 3-year-old daughter, Asra, was deported to Costa Rica from the U.S. over a month ago.Ronny Rojas / Noticias Telemundo

NEILY, Costa Rica — After being deported from the U.S. with his wife and 6-year-old son, German Smirnov, a Russian national, is being held at a migrant camp in the Central American country. After more than a month there, he says he feels he is being forced to consider staying there to live.

Smirnov, 36, is among 110 migrants, mostly from Asian and African countries, who have been detained at the Center for Temporary Attention of Migrants (CATEM) since late February and now find themselves in limbo.

Many of the detainees tell Noticias Telemundo they’re confused and torn over the limited options being offered by Costa Rican officials, including applying for asylum there, going back to their home countries, waiting it out in the shelter or officially documenting their case to request asylum in another country. It’s all while enduring high temperatures and poor food and conditions.

But many of the migrants say they don’t have a safe country to return to and little information to help them.

For the first time since the migrants arrived from the U.S., and following weeks of pressure from activists and lawmakers, Costa Rican authorities have opened up the camp to the media. Several migrants who have had their documents confiscated said that they feel they have few choices about what comes next.

“They tell us nothing here,” Smirnov said. “We’re here for almost 40 days.”

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German Smirnov, 36, originally from Russia, was deported to Costa Rica from the U.S. with Alexandra, another migrant from Russia. Ronny Rojas / Noticias Telemundo

Smirnov, who had planned on requesting asylum in America before the Trump administration suspended asylum at the Southern border, said it’s impossible to return to Russia after fleeing for political reasons.

“It’s complicated. I’m ready to stay here, but I don’t have anywhere to live,” Smirnov said. “I don’t have a job and I don’t speak the local language.”

Costa Rica is one of several Central American countries that has agreed to serve as a bridge between the U.S. and the migrants, many of whom come from countries like China or India.

So far, six people have fled the camp without authorization or documents, said Omer Badilla, Costa Rica’s deputy minister of the interior and police. Dozens more have been repatriated to their home countries, while the majority remain at the center behind a chain-link fence, forbidden to leave the premises.

Until the migrants make an official choice, passports and other identification documents will remain confiscated, Badilla said. As of Monday, the country had not received a formal asylum request from any of the migrants, Badilla said.

Badilla said that the migrants have all been made aware of their options, particularly about the need to formalize their asylum claims with documents in other countries. But he said that many do not want to speak with authorities.

“They’ve been told to document the case, and they’re afraid. We only work on documented cases. They’re afraid to talk to the police,” Badilla said. “We’re working so they can feel confident that we won’t take action against them.”

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Armenian children deported from the U.S. sit in the CATEM shelter in Costa Rica. Ronny Rojas / Noticias Telemundo

But Badilla said that the country is guaranteeing that those who feel a “well-founded fear” of returning to their countries of origin will not be forced to do so.

Smirnov said that, if he returns to Russia, he could be forced to join in Moscow’s war against Ukraine.

“They’ll put me in jail or send me to war,” he said. “It’s simple, because my country is at war with a neighboring country.”

A St. Petersburg native, Smirnov was an elections official who was recruited by the Anti-Corruption Foundation, an organization founded by the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny, to expose fraud in last year’s election. Authorities discovered his agreement with the group, he said, and he was forced to flee Russia.

“They caught me while I was recording the whole process,” Smirnov said. “Maybe someone betrayed me, I don’t know.”

Smirnov, who was detained for nearly a month in San Diego before being deported to Costa Rica, said his family had hoped to relocate to Australia or Canada. But he said that their requests for help in relocating to a third country have been ignored by authorities.

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Children deported from the U.S. to Costa Rica send a message asking for help.Ronny Rojas / Noticias Telemundo

Mohammad Saber Asadi, who fled Afghanistan with his wife, Najia, and their almost 3-year-old daughter, Asra, said he’s been searching for a path to another country, like Canada or Germany. But without visas in place, he said that authorities have given him only two options: stay in Costa Rica or go back to Afghanistan.

Asadi, who runs a construction company, fled Afghanistan after he was threatened by the Taliban for selling materials to contractors from the United States or other Western countries. Asadi said that he had already been arrested after the Taliban returned to power in 2021, and can’t risk another stint in prison.

“I don’t know what will happen to me,” Asadi said.

Attempting to start a life in Costa Rica isn’t so simple.

“I would like to go to a country that I can live, that I can make a good future for my family, for my daughter,” Asadi said. “But here in Costa Rica, I think it’s not possible for me. I don’t know Spanish, I don’t have information about the culture of Costa Rica and I don’t have any family here to support me.”

The conditions at the camp haven’t made their time in detention any easier, either, the migrants said. Alexandra, a Russian migrant who requested to go by her first name out of fear of retaliation from the Russian government, said many in the camp are nervous, stressed and lost. There’s little ventilation amid the over-90-degree weather, and many have fallen ill.

“We don’t have air conditioning or fans, some families have sick children, and some women have fainted,” she said.

Asadi also said that while food had been provided by a local restaurant, paid for by the U.S., those meals have since been halted. Migrants have been living on beans and rice on most days, which is particularly difficult for infants, since it’s been challenging to access any baby food. And little drinking water is provided throughout the day.

“We are not free to go outside of here. Here, it’s like a jail,” Asadi said. “The children, they cry every day. They cry.”

Costa Rica’s role in U.S. deportations has drawn criticisms for the past few weeks, with immigrant rights advocates saying that the country is complicit in America’s human rights violations. Badilla has said that Costa Rica agreed to accept the migrants “because of our history and our customs as human rights protectors,” and that the agreement with the Trump administration isn’t based on any special conditions.

“We responded to the United States’ government’s request, and we raised our hand to help them,” Badilla said.

Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chaves said at a news conference in February that the country is helping its “economically powerful brother from the north.”

“If they impose a tax in our free zones, it’ll screw us,” Chaves said. “I don’t think they’ll do it, thank God ... Love is repaid with love. ... Two-hundred will come, we treat them well and they will leave.”
 
Sniff
Maaaan, fuck having laws and shit. This obviously framed picture is all I needed to know deportation is evil and endless migration is ethical, viable, and noble.


Fucking cocksucker journos can get bent; that goat fucker doesn't look like he's missed a meal and looks to be in a literal tranquil park of sorts.

Many of the detainees tell Noticias Telemundo
Literal mamahuevos owned by the WEF and Klaus' stubby prick.

Please feel bad for the little aliens in Dior shirts and clean clothing; they have suffered enough!!!! (:_(
 
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Is it just the camera focus or does that guy in the first photo have an uncanny valley face?

I really wouldn’t put it past them to start using AI to make these soap opera sob story photos.
That's just your average Central Asian phenotype. Given he's from Afghanistan he's probably a Hazara (the Pashtun-dominated Taliban are currently going Total Non-Pashtun Death rn).
 
Mohammad Saber Asadi, who fled Afghanistan with his wife, Najia, and their almost 3-year-old daughter, Asra, said he’s been searching for a path to another country, like Canada or Germany.
The absolute gall of this cocksucker. "Only white nations, please! These filthy spics think I should stay here or in a neighboring nation- imagine that!"
 
Telemundo they’re confused and torn over the limited options being offered by Costa Rican officials, including applying for asylum there, going back to their home countries, waiting it out in the shelter or officially documenting their case to request asylum in another country.
Wow such limited options, it's like a whole holocaust to not have access to white people
 
What exactly do these people want Americans to do? I mean I know the answer but this emotionally manipulative beat around the bush skirt the true answer bullshit is unreal. Just write the article saying that you think white people should step aside, gift their home and job to the poor migrant, and then bow and apologize for eternity for the crime of being born in a better off situation.
 
Wow... Costa Rica?? I know of about 3 White Americans who have moved there in the past few years. And quite a few more that vacation there. I keep hearing that it's a paradise. Deported to paradise and they're still bitching. Don't they have a lot of resorts there? Why can't the English speaking Taliban man get a job at a resort or something?
How lucky they are to not be shipped immediately back to their shitholes of origin and given options. If it were up to me they'd be in the Guatemalan super max.
 
The problem is that a good number of these shithole countries these losers fled are saying "lol fuck no, we don't want our bottom barrel niggers back, your problem now whiteys, lol fuck off". Then what? America can't take them, never mind Costa Rica and Panama and El Salvador and whatever various third party shitholes Trump is trying to dump the garbage in. There are too fucking many of them for @JosephStalin's TweekFlight Helicopter Transport Co. They will end up just being leeches on any society that they wind up in. Do we keep them in concentration camps the rest of their lives? Build ovens?
 
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