Secret Cameroon Deportation Agreement and Torture of Deportees
The US secretly deported 17 people from 9 African countries to Cameroon under a covert agreement. Deportees were immediately beaten by gendarmes, arbitrarily detained, and subjected to torture. Journalists attempting to document conditions were detained. HRW documented systematic abuses including enforced disappearances and rape.
Under a secret agreement, the US deported 17 people from 9 African countries to Cameroon in January-February 2026, including asylum seekers and a stateless person. Cameroonian authorities immediately detained deportees and beat them with batons. Journalists who attempted to interview deportees were also detained. Human Rights Watch documented arbitrary arrest, enforced disappearances, torture, rape, extortion, and confiscation of IDs upon arrival.
Executive summary
What this record documents
- Under a secret agreement, the US deported 17 people from 9 African countries (Angola, DRC, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe) to Cameroon in January-February 2026.
- Deportees included asylum seekers with court-ordered protections against deportation and at least one stateless person.
- Cameroonian gendarmes beat deportees with batons upon arrival at Douala airport; at least 12 confirmed cases of arbitrary arrest and beating since late 2025.
- HRW documented: arbitrary detention, enforced disappearances, torture, rape, extortion, confiscation of national IDs, harassment of relatives.
- Journalists who attempted to interview deportees were detained by Cameroonian authorities.
Timeline
Sequence of events
January 15, 2026
First deportation flight to Cameroon under secret agreement
The US deported a group of non-Cameroonian nationals to Cameroon under a secret agreement, despite many having pending asylum claims or court-ordered protections.
February 15, 2026
Second deportation flight; journalists detained
A second group of deportees arrived in Cameroon. Nine migrants were deported in secret, ignoring legal protections. Journalists attempting to interview deportees were detained by Cameroonian authorities.
February 20, 2026
Human Rights Watch publishes findings
HRW published detailed findings documenting arbitrary detention, beating, torture, rape, enforced disappearances, and confiscation of IDs targeting deportees from the US. HRW called for an end to the deportation agreement.
Analysis
Reporting, legal context, and impact
What Happened
In January and February 2026, under a secret agreement between the United States and Cameroon, the US deported 17 people to Cameroon who were nationals of nine different African countries: Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Zimbabwe. None were Cameroonian nationals.
The deportees included asylum seekers, individuals with court-ordered protections against return to their home countries due to fear of persecution or torture, and at least one stateless person. By sending them to Cameroon rather than their countries of origin, the US circumvented specific judicial orders prohibiting their deportation.
Documented Abuses on Arrival
Human Rights Watch documented systematic abuses against deportees immediately upon arrival:
- Beatings by gendarmes: Cameroonian gendarmes wielding batons beat deportees upon touchdown at Douala airport. At least 12 confirmed cases of arbitrary arrest and beating since late 2025.
- Arbitrary detention: Despite having no legal basis for detaining foreign nationals who arrived involuntarily, Cameroonian authorities immediately imprisoned deportees.
- Enforced disappearances: Some deportees were disappeared into the Cameroonian detention system without notification to families or legal representatives.
- Torture and rape: HRW documented cases of torture and sexual violence against deportees.
- Extortion: Detention was accompanied by demands for payment.
- Confiscation of identity documents: National IDs were seized, rendering deportees unable to prove their identity or nationality.
- Harassment of relatives: Family members of deportees were targeted for harassment.
Journalists Detained
When journalists attempted to interview deportees to document their conditions, Cameroonian authorities detained the reporters. The suppression of press coverage further obscures the scope of abuses and prevents accountability.
Secret Agreement
The deportation agreement between the US and Cameroon has not been made public. Unlike some other third-country agreements (such as Rwanda, which was documented at $7.5 million), the terms, financial arrangements, and scope of the Cameroon deal remain secret.
Cameroon's Own Human Rights Record
Cameroon is a particularly dangerous destination for deportees. For years, parts of the country have been wracked by violence and armed conflict. The Anglophone crisis in the Northwest and Southwest regions has involved systematic government repression, and armed groups and government forces have committed widespread abuses including torture in detention, extrajudicial killings, and attacks on civilians.
The US State Department's own human rights reports document significant problems in Cameroon, including arbitrary arrest, prolonged pretrial detention, and torture by security forces.
Why This Entry Is Rated Critical
- Documented torture of deportees: HRW confirmed beating, torture, rape, and enforced disappearance upon arrival
- Circumvention of court orders: Deportees with judicial protection against return to their home countries were sent to a third country to evade those orders
- Stateless person deported: A person with no nationality was sent to a country where they have no legal existence
- Secret agreement: The terms of the arrangement are hidden from public scrutiny
- Press suppression: Journalists documenting conditions were detained
- Known danger: Cameroon's human rights record is well-documented by the State Department and international organizations
- Part of systematic pattern: This is the most extreme documented outcome of the broader third-country deportation system
Linked reporting
Reporting and secondary sources
Abuses in Cameroon After US Deports Third-Country Nationals
Cameroon Third-Country Deportation and Detention Scheme Explained
US Deports Nine Migrants in Secret, Ignoring Legal Protections
US Deportations Ignite Cameroon Abuses Ignoring Refugee Protections
US/Africa: Expulsion Deals Flout Rights
Journalists Detained in Cameroon Expose the Darkness Around Trump's Third-Country Deportation Deals
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