The U.S. government has come under fire after reports revealed it paid $7.5 million to Equatorial Guinea in exchange for the country’s agreement to accept non-citizen migrants deported from the United States. The deal has sparked outrage among U.S. lawmakers and human rights groups, who question both the ethical and practical implications of funding an authoritarian regime with a poor human rights record.
According to The Guardian, the payment was drawn from the Migration and Refugee Assistance Fund, an emergency reserve established by Congress to address global refugee crises and resettlement efforts. However, under the Trump administration, the fund was redirected to support deportation and repatriation initiatives, a move critics say contradicts the fund’s original humanitarian purpose.
Public data from the U.S. State Department shows that the money was transferred directly to the Equatorial Guinean government, led by President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, who has ruled since 1979 and is often described as one of Africa’s most entrenched autocrats. His son and vice president, Teodorin Obiang, has been convicted of corruption and money laundering in multiple countries, raising concerns that U.S. funds could be misused or siphoned off.
Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen, a senior member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, sent a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, denouncing the payment as “highly irregular.” She cited Equatorial Guinea’s long-standing record of human trafficking, corruption, and political repression, and demanded clarification on whether deportees were receiving protection from abuse or exploitation upon arrival.
Sources indicate that the Trump administration had approached at least 58 nations with similar proposals—offering financial incentives or diplomatic pressure to accept third-country migrants expelled from the U.S. Many of these countries, including Eswatini, South Sudan, and El Salvador, have been cited in U.S. human rights reports for systemic rights violations.
A State Department spokesperson defended the move, stating that implementing the administration’s immigration policies remains “a top priority,” emphasizing the government’s commitment to “ending illegal and large-scale migration while strengthening border security.”
The controversy highlights a growing debate over the ethics of outsourcing immigration enforcement to foreign governments—especially those accused of corruption or abuse—raising fundamental questions about U.S. accountability and moral leadership in global migration policy.