Rwanda has formally agreed to accept up to 250 migrants deported from the United States, as part of a diplomatic arrangement coordinated under the Trump administration’s expanded third‑country deportation strategy. Signed in June 2025 during negotiations in Kigali, the agreement is the first of its kind between Washington and the African nation.
Under the terms, Rwanda retains the right to vet and approve each individual before arrival. Deportees must have completed any prison terms and must not face active criminal charges; child sex offenders are explicitly excluded. Once accepted, deportees will receive workforce training, healthcare, and housing support to facilitate integration into Rwandan society—part of Kigali’s stated philosophy of rehabilitation and reintegration shaped by the country’s own history of displacement.
Although financial details remain confidential, the agreement includes a grant from the U.S. government to support Rwanda’s reception and administrative costs. Reports indicate U.S. funding will bolster immigration services, vocational training, and initial resettlement infrastructure—but the amount has not been disclosed. Deportees are not required to stay permanently and may choose to leave Rwanda in the future.
This deal marks Kigali’s latest effort to position itself as a strategic partner for Western countries looking for third‑country solutions to migration challenges. Rwanda previously signed a controversial 2022 deportation pact with the U.K.—a plan that ultimately collapsed after Britain’s Supreme Court ruled it unlawful and the incoming Labour government canceled it in 2024.
While Rwanda touts the agreement as a humanitarian and pragmatic solution aligned with its values, human rights organizations have raised concerns. Critics note Rwanda’s record of security crackdowns and suppression of dissent under President Paul Kagame, questioning whether deportees could face risks or lack adequate protection.
Rwandan authorities say the first group of around ten vetted deportees could arrive soon, with additional deportations carried out in small batches over time.