Ninety nationals of Somalia and two Kenyans have been sent home from the United States of America.
This action may be sequel to the promise made Americans by new President, Donald John Trump.
The deportees arrived at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Kenya, on Wednesday.
The deportees were said to have arrived at the airport at midday aboard Omni, an American Charter Airline.
The Somalis reportedly boarded a Juba Airways flight that left for Mogadishu, capital of Somalia, at 3pm.
According
to Daily Nation, a Kenyan newspaper, sources at the airport were quoted
to have said the travellers were accompanied by security officers from
the US.
Zipporah Waweru, an official of Jomo Kenyatta airport, confirmed that
there had been a plane carrying Somalis in transit to Mogadishu, but
she could not confirm whether they were deportees.
“They have left and to me, they looked happy so I cannot for sure tell you that they were deported or not,” she said.
The
deportees are the first set of Africans to be affected by the
immigration policy of President Donald Trump, who has vowed to crack
down on millions of immigrants in the US.
Trump had earlier
disclosed his plans to sign executive orders which would lead to the
imposition of visa ban on 7 predominantly Islam nations – three from
Africa.
The countries targeted are Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.
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