War Crime / Crime Against Humanity Ongoing

Secret Deportation of 260+ Venezuelans to CECOT Mega-Prison

Over 260 Venezuelans were secretly deported to CECOT, where HRW documented torture, sexual violence, prolonged incommunicado detention, and denial of basic necessities. Many deportees had no criminal history and were asylum seekers.

What Happened

Between March and April 2025, the Trump administration secretly deported more than 260 Venezuelan nationals to El Salvador's CECOT (Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo), a maximum-security mega-prison that has been the subject of extensive international condemnation for its conditions. The deportations were conducted in secret: families were not notified, attorneys were not informed, and the deportees were held incommunicado upon arrival.

Many of the deportees were asylum seekers. Some had no criminal history whatsoever. They were not deported to their home country of Venezuela, but rather transferred to a third country's prison system under an arrangement between the Trump administration and the government of Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele.

Federal Judge Paula Xinis, in the related Abrego Garcia case, described CECOT as "one of the most notoriously inhumane and dangerous prisons in the world" that "by design, deprives its detainees of adequate food, water, and shelter."

Documented Torture and Abuse

In November 2025, Human Rights Watch and the Salvadoran human rights organization Cristosal published a comprehensive investigative report titled "You Have Arrived in Hell," based on extensive interviews with deportees and their families. The report documented:

  • Regular and severe physical abuse by prison guards, including systematic beatings
  • Sexual violence, with at least three documented cases including forced oral sex
  • Verbal and psychological abuse, including threats and degradation
  • Prolonged incommunicado detention without any contact with family members or legal representatives
  • Inadequate food, with detainees reporting chronic hunger
  • Denial of basic hygiene and sanitation, including lack of access to clean water and soap
  • Limited access to healthcare, with injuries from beatings going untreated
  • No recreational or educational activities, with detainees confined to cells for extended periods

The title of the report -- "You Have Arrived in Hell" -- comes from words reportedly spoken to deportees upon their arrival at CECOT.

Enforced Disappearance

The manner of the deportations meets the definition of enforced disappearance under the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. The deportees were:

  1. Deprived of their liberty by agents of the state (ICE)
  2. Transferred to the custody of another state's prison system
  3. Their fate and whereabouts were concealed from their families and attorneys
  4. They were placed outside the protection of law, with no legal process available to them in El Salvador

The National Immigration Law Center has maintained a tracking project documenting the "CECOT disappearances," reflecting the characterization of these transfers as enforced disappearances under international law.

Non-Refoulement Is Absolute

The Convention Against Torture Article 3 establishes an absolute prohibition on transferring any person to a state where there are substantial grounds for believing they would be in danger of being subjected to torture. This prohibition admits no exceptions -- it applies regardless of national security considerations, criminal history, or immigration status. The non-refoulement obligation under the CAT is widely recognized as a jus cogens norm (a peremptory norm of international law from which no derogation is permitted).

The US government transferred 260+ people to a facility where:

  • The risk of torture was not merely foreseeable but documented and publicly known
  • HRW had already filed court declarations describing the conditions before many of the flights occurred
  • A federal judge had already described CECOT as designed to deprive detainees of basic necessities
  • El Salvador's broader state of emergency and prison system had been condemned by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights

The transfers therefore violated Article 3 not through negligence or failure to assess risk, but with actual or constructive knowledge that torture would occur.

Cruel, Inhuman, and Degrading Treatment

Even if any individual act of mistreatment fell short of the legal definition of torture, the conditions documented by HRW -- chronic hunger, denial of sanitation, incommunicado detention, psychological abuse -- collectively constitute cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment prohibited by CAT Article 16 and ICCPR Article 7.

Due Process Violations

The deportees were transferred to CECOT without:

  • Individualized assessment of their risk of torture or persecution
  • Notice to their attorneys or families
  • Opportunity to seek judicial review
  • Access to consular assistance
  • Any legal process in El Salvador to challenge their detention

This violated ICCPR Articles 9 and 14 and the Inter-American Convention on Human Rights.

Why This Is Classified Extreme

This incident is classified at extreme severity because:

  • Documented torture including sexual violence: The HRW report provides firsthand evidence of systematic torture at the facility where deportees were sent, constituting a crime against humanity if shown to be part of a widespread or systematic attack.
  • Absolute prohibition violated: Non-refoulement under the CAT is a jus cogens norm -- it is among the highest-order prohibitions in international law, permitting no exceptions under any circumstances.
  • Enforced disappearance: Secret transfers without notice to families or attorneys meet the international legal definition of enforced disappearance, itself a crime against humanity under the Rome Statute.
  • Asylum seekers with no criminal history: Many victims were not accused of any crime; they were asylum seekers who had come to the United States seeking protection.
  • Ongoing detention: As of March 2026, dozens of deportees remain in CECOT with no clear mechanism for release, a full year after their transfer.

International Law Violations

Statute Article Nature of Violation
Convention Against Torture Art. 3 Transfer to facility where torture was documented and foreseeable
Convention Against Torture Art. 16 Subjecting deportees to cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment
ICCPR Art. 7 Torture and cruel treatment documented by HRW
ICCPR Art. 9 Arbitrary detention without legal process
ICCPR Art. 14 Denial of due process and access to legal counsel
Enforced Disappearance Convention Art. 2 Secret transfer and concealment of whereabouts from families
Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture Art. 3 State responsibility for torture inflicted on transferred persons
Nelson Mandela Rules Rules 1, 43-46 Conditions of detention falling below minimum standards

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. First secret deportation flights to CECOT

    The Trump administration began secretly deporting Venezuelan nationals to CECOT mega-prison in El Salvador. Deportees were transported without notice to their families, attorneys, or the public.

  2. HRW files declaration in J.G.G. v. Trump on CECOT conditions

    Human Rights Watch submitted an expert declaration in federal litigation describing conditions at CECOT, including overcrowding, lack of sanitation, and denial of legal access.

  3. Deportation flights to CECOT continue through April

    Additional flights brought the total number of Venezuelan nationals deported to CECOT to over 260. Deportees included asylum seekers with no criminal history.

  4. HRW and Cristosal publish 'You Have Arrived in Hell'

    The comprehensive report documented systematic torture including sexual violence, regular physical beatings by guards, incommunicado detention, inadequate food, denial of hygiene and sanitation, limited healthcare access, and no recreational or educational activities.

  5. Washington Post reports deportees still held a year later

    Reporting confirmed that dozens of Venezuelans deported by the Trump administration remained in CECOT, some for nearly a year, with no clear legal process for release or return.

Sources

  1. You Have Arrived in Hell: Torture and Other Abuses Against Venezuelans in El Salvador — Human Rights Watch / Cristosal archived ✓
  2. Human Rights Watch Declaration on Prison Conditions in El Salvador (J.G.G. v. Trump) — Human Rights Watch archived ✓
  3. Tracking the CECOT Disappearances — National Immigration Law Center archived ✓
  4. Deportees sent by Trump to Salvadoran prison are still stuck a year later — The Washington Post archived ✓
  5. You Have Arrived in Hell: Report Documents Torture of Venezuelans Deported to El Salvador's CECOT — Democracy Now! archived ✓
  6. Trump Must Be Held Accountable for People Detained in El Salvador's CECOT — American Immigration Council archived ✓

Verification

Publication provenance

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