Attorneys have had no contact with migrants held at military base in Djibouti, groups tell Supreme Court
Source: CNN Politics
Published 5:02 PM EDT, Wed June 4, 2025
CNN A group of migrants that the Trumps administration has been holding on a military base in Djibouti have been unable to contact their attorneys, immigrant rights groups told the Supreme Court on Wednesday.
The detainees, who were initially bound for South Sudan, are part of a high-profile emergency appeal pending at the Supreme Court over the administrations effort to remove migrants to places other than their homeland. Lower courts have required officials to provide those migrants additional notice and an opportunity to claim a fear of being tortured.
Groups representing the migrants, including the National Immigration Litigation Alliance, said in a new brief that officials had set up a private interview room on the base but that to date, counsel have not heard from them. The migrants, the groups said, are stranded incommunicado in Djibouti, a country of which they have no knowledge, and en route to another country, South Sudan, where none have ever set foot and which remains engulfed in ongoing and intensifying armed conflict.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly sided with Trump amid a flurry of emergency cases that have reached its docket since the president returned to power. One issue on which the White House has not fared as well has been immigration, particularly in situations where due process concerns have been raised. The high court notably barred the administration last month from deporting other migrants under the 1789 Alien Enemies Act without more notice and a chance to have their cases reviewed.
Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/04/politics/djibouti-migrants-supreme-court