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%President John Mahama told reporters that Ghana had agreed to take in nationals from West Africa, where a regional agreement allows visa-free travel.
Ghana has received the first batch of West Africans deported from the United States, Ghanaian President John Mahama said Wednesday.
Deporting people to third countries - in many cases places they've never lived - has been a hallmark of US President Donald Trump's crackdown on undocumented immigrants.
A group of 14 deportees including Nigerians and one Gambian have already arrived in Ghana, and the government facilitated their return to their home countries, Mahama said at a press conference.
Mahama did not specify a cap on how many deportees Ghana would accept.
He justified the decision by saying West Africans "don't need a visa anyway" to come to Ghana.
Visa-free travel
The Ghanaian president said his country had agreed to take in nationals from West Africa, where a regional agreement allows visa-free travel.
"We were approached by the US to accept third-party nationals who were being removed from the US. And we agreed with them that West African nationals were acceptable," Mahama said.
President Trump aims to deport millions of immigrants in the US and his administration has sought to ramp up removals to third countries, including sending convicted criminals to South Sudan and Eswatini, formerly known as Swaziland.
Ghana has long been home to Nigerian immigrants, though recent weeks have seen sporadic anti-Nigerian protests in several cities where groups of demonstrators demanded their expulsion, blaming them for rising crime, prostitution and unfair economic competition.
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