Thousands of non-Mexican migrants deported from the US
are being left in southern Mexican cities far from the border,
often without legal status or resources.

Many are elderly, ill, or have lived most of their lives in the US,
and now face unsafe conditions and limited access to aid.

Human rights advocates warn the policy violates international protections and leaves deportees in a 'quasi-stateless limbo.'

Cases include a trans woman deported to Honduras despite court findings of danger,
and a Salvadoran man protected under the "Convention Against Torture" who was later jailed after being returned to El Salvador.

Aid workers describe deportees as elderly, ill, and abandoned in violent areas,
with some dying shortly after arrival due to lack of medical care.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/homeless-and-stateless-deportees-from-us-are-trapped-in-mexico/ar-AA1Z6pPR?cvid=69becc76d65a485f9fd66c0c8d6a8e82&ei=22

MSN