Georgetown:
The American State Secretary Marco Rubio described a few tren on Thursday the Aragua gang members as worse than Al Qaida, while promising to double on controversial forced deportations.
With the government of Donald Trump who is confronted with severe criticism for deporting aircraft full of migrants from the United States without a normal process, Rubio defended the policy.
“These are some really bad people,” said Rubio during a trip to Guyana, where he got more questions about whether those who were deported to El Salvador, Venezuela and elsewhere were actually gang members.
“Tren The Aragua is one of the most dangerous gangs that the world has ever seen,” he said, referring to a group that has grown from Venezuelan prisons to become a thousands of strict transnational crime syndicate.
“When they were temporarily held in Guantanamo,” said Rubio, “said the Marines in Guantanamo that” these are some of the roughest people we have ever had, they were worse than the Al Qaida boys who were in their prisons. ”
“Think about that. We lost them and want to get rid of it more,” Rubio added.
Al Qaeda was responsible for the death of around 2,977 people in the United States alone on September 11, 2001.
The group and its affiliated companies have also launched for decades of bombing all over the world, often focused on civilian and fought bloody insurance policies from Somalia to Afghanistan.
The Tren de Aragua is active in Latin -America and in the United States, where Trump was recently declared a terrorist organization.
Some lower American courts have ruled that the summary deportation of Trump of Venezuelan migrants – according to an obscure law at 1798 in wartime – should be paused.
The relatives of different men transported from the United States to a notorious prison of El Salvador, said that their loved ones were not involved in the gang and were the target because they have tattoos.
Rubio stated on Thursday that the group was well investigated by the Ministry of the Interior Security, instead of his department, and that he had faith in their work.
(Except for the headline, this story was not edited by Our staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.)