Migrant deported in chains: ‘No-one will go to US illegally now’

South Asia and Afghanistan correspondent

Gurpreet Singh was handcuffed, his legs shackled and a series tied round his waist. He was led onto the tarmac in Texas by US Border Patrol, in direction of a ready C-17 army transport plane.
It was 3 February and, after a months-long journey, he realised his dream of residing in America was over. He was being deported again to India. “It felt like the bottom was slipping away from beneath my ft,” he mentioned.
Gurpreet, 39, was considered one of 1000’s of Indians in recent times to have spent their life financial savings and crossed continents to enter the US illegally by way of its southern border, as they sought to flee an unemployment disaster again dwelling.
There are about 725,000 undocumented Indian immigrants within the US, the third largest group behind Mexicans and El Salvadoreans, in accordance with the newest figures from Pew Analysis in 2022.
Now Gurpreet has turn out to be one of many first undocumented Indians to be despatched dwelling since President Donald Trump took workplace, with a promise to make mass deportations a precedence.
Gurpreet meant to make an asylum declare primarily based on threats he mentioned he had acquired in India, however – in step with an government order from Trump to show folks away with out granting them asylum hearings – he mentioned he was eliminated with out his case ever being thought of.
About 3,700 Indians had been despatched again on constitution and business flights throughout President Biden’s tenure, however latest photos of detainees in chains below the Trump administration have sparked outrage in India.
US Border Patrol launched the pictures in an internet video with a bombastic choral soundtrack and the warning: “Should you cross illegally, you can be eliminated.”

“We sat in handcuffs and shackles for greater than 40 hours. Even ladies had been certain the identical approach. Solely the youngsters had been free,” Gurpreet informed the BBC again in India. “We weren’t allowed to face up. If we needed to make use of the bathroom, we had been escorted by US forces, and simply considered one of our handcuffs was taken off.”
Opposition events protested in parliament, saying Indian deportees got “inhuman and degrading therapy”. “There’s a variety of speak about how Prime Minister Modi and Mr Trump are good pals. Then why did Mr Modi enable this?” mentioned Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, a key opposition chief.
Gurpreet mentioned: “The Indian authorities ought to have mentioned one thing on our behalf. They need to have informed the US to hold out the deportation the best way it has been accomplished earlier than, with out {the handcuffs} and chains.”
An Indian overseas ministry spokesman mentioned the federal government had raised these issues with the US, and that in consequence, on subsequent flights, ladies deportees weren’t handcuffed and shackled.
However on the bottom, the intimidating photos and President Trump’s rhetoric appear to be having the specified impact.
“No-one will strive going to the US now by way of this unlawful ‘donkey’ route whereas Trump is in energy,” mentioned Gurpreet.
In the long run, this might rely on whether or not there are continued deportations, however for now lots of the Indian people-smugglers, regionally known as “brokers”, have gone into hiding, fearing raids in opposition to them by Indian police.

Gurpreet mentioned Indian authorities demanded the variety of the agent he had used when he landed again dwelling, however the smuggler might now not be reached.
“I do not blame them, although. We had been thirsty and went to the properly. They did not come to us,” mentioned Gurpreet.
Whereas the official headline determine places the unemployment price at solely 3.2%, it conceals a extra precarious image for a lot of Indians. Solely 22% of employees have common salaries, the bulk are self-employed and almost a fifth are “unpaid helpers”, together with ladies working in household companies.
“We depart India solely as a result of we’re compelled to. If I received a job which paid me even 30,000 rupees (£270/$340) a month, my household would get by. I might by no means have considered leaving,” mentioned Gurpreet, who has a spouse, a mom and an 18-month-old child to take care of.
“You may say no matter you need concerning the financial system on paper, however you might want to see the fact on the bottom. There are not any alternatives right here for us to work or run a enterprise.”

Gupreet’s trucking firm was among the many cash-dependent small companies that had been badly hit when the Indian authorities withdrew 86% of the foreign money in circulation with 4 hours discover. He mentioned he did not receives a commission by his shoppers, and had no cash to maintain the enterprise afloat. One other small enterprise he arrange, managing logistics for different corporations, additionally failed due to the Covid lockdown, he mentioned.
He mentioned he tried to get visas to go to Canada and the UK, however his functions had been rejected.
Then he took all his financial savings, bought a plot of land he owned, and borrowed cash from kin to place collectively 4 million rupees ($45,000/£36,000) to pay a smuggler to organise his journey, Gurpreet informed us.
On 28 August 2024, he flew from India to Guyana in South America to start out an arduous journey to the US.
Gurpreet identified all of the stops he made on a map on his cellphone. From Guyana he travelled by way of Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia, principally by buses and vehicles, partly by boat, and briefly on a airplane – handed from one people-smuggler to a different, detained and launched by authorities just a few occasions alongside the best way.

From Colombia, smugglers tried to get him a flight to Mexico, so he might keep away from crossing the dreaded Darién Hole. However Colombian immigration did not enable him to board the flight, so he needed to make a harmful trek by way of the jungle.
A dense expanse of rainforest between Colombia and Panama, the Darién Hole can solely be crossed on foot, risking accidents, illness and assaults by prison gangs. Final 12 months, 50 folks died making the crossing.
“I used to be not scared. I have been a sportsman so I assumed I might be OK. Nevertheless it was the hardest part,” mentioned Gurpreet. “We walked for 5 days by way of jungles and rivers. In lots of elements, whereas wading by way of the river, the water got here as much as my chest.”
Every group was accompanied by a smuggler – or a “donker” as Gurpreet and different migrants seek advice from them, a phrase seemingly derived from the time period “donkey route” used for unlawful migration journeys.

At evening they might pitch tents within the jungle, eat a little bit of meals they had been carrying and attempt to relaxation.
“It was raining all the times we had been there. We had been drenched to our bones,” he mentioned. They had been guided over three mountains of their first two days. After that, he mentioned they needed to observe a route marked out in blue plastic baggage tied to bushes by the smugglers.
“My ft had begun to really feel like lead. My toenails had been cracked, and the palms of my palms had been peeled off and had thorns in them. Nonetheless, we had been fortunate we did not encounter any robbers.”
After they reached Panama, Gurpreet mentioned he and about 150 others had been detained by border officers in a cramped jail-like centre. After 20 days, they had been launched, he mentioned, and from there it took him greater than a month to achieve Mexico, passing by way of Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala.

Gurpreet mentioned they waited for almost a month in Mexico till there was a chance to cross the border into the US close to San Diego.
“We did not scale a wall. There’s a mountain close to it which we climbed over. And there is a razor wire which the donker minimize by way of,” he mentioned.
Gurpreet entered the US on 15 January, 5 days earlier than President Trump took workplace – believing that he had made it simply in time, earlier than the borders turned impenetrable and guidelines turned tighter.
As soon as in San Diego, he surrendered to US Border Patrol, and was then detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Throughout the Biden administration, unlawful or undocumented migrants would seem earlier than an immigration officer who would do a preliminary interview to find out if every individual had a case for asylum. Whereas a majority of Indians migrated out of financial necessity, some additionally left fearing persecution due to their spiritual or social backgrounds, or their sexual orientation.

In the event that they cleared the interview, they had been launched, pending a choice on granting asylum from an immigration decide. The method would typically take years, however they had been allowed to stay within the US within the meantime.
That is what Gurpreet thought would occur to him. He had deliberate to search out work at a grocery retailer after which to get into trucking, a enterprise he’s aware of.
As a substitute, lower than three weeks after he entered the US, he discovered himself being led in direction of that C-17 airplane and going again to the place he began.
Of their small home in Sultanpur Lodhi, a metropolis within the northern state of Punjab, Gurpreet is now looking for work to repay the cash he owes, and fend for his household.
Further reporting by Aakriti Thapar