Venezuelans Flown Home Amid Migration Row With U.S

A Venezuelan migrant gives the thumb up as he is wheeled on a wheelchair upon arrival at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela on March 20, 2025. Venezuela on Thursday flew home a planeful of its citizens from Mexico, most of them US-bound migrants whose journey came to a premature end as Washington cracks down on undocumented foreigners. (Photo by Pedro MATTEY / AFP)

Venezuela flew home hundreds of citizens from Mexico, most of them US-bound migrants whose journey came to a premature end as Washington cracks down on undocumented foreigners.

A plane operated by sanctioned state airline Conviasa touched down at Maiquetia International Airport in the morning, AFP observed.

Venezuela’s government said there were 311 migrants on board.

It was the fourth group of Venezuelan migrants to return home since US President Donald Trump took office in January.

Under the government’s  Return to the Homeland program two planes brought migrants home from Texas, and another from Honduras which are some 600 people in total.

The Honduras group had first been sent by the United States to its military base in Guantanamo, Cuba.

Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro met Trump envoy Richard Grenell in Caracas in January, agreeing to receive deported migrants and offering to provide the transport.

The agreement was interpreted as a shift towards pragmatic engagement with Washington, with which Caracas severed ties in 2019.

Soon after the Grenell meeting, however, the Trump administration accused Maduro of reneging on the deal and canceled permission for US oil giant Chevron to operate in Venezuela.

Last weekend, Trump invoked rarely used wartime legislation to fly 238 Venezuelans to a notoriously harsh prison in El Salvador, alleging they were members of a violent gang.

The deportations took place despite a US federal judge granting a temporary suspension of the expulsion order.

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