Government details migration plan after first deportation flight from Iquique

On Thursday, 40 foreign nationals were deported from Iquique to Bolivia, Ecuador, and Colombia in the first flight under President José Antonio Kast's administration. Interior Undersecretary Máximo Pavez and National Migration Director Frank Sauerbaum outlined the Migration Control Plan, featuring increased flights and inspections. They stressed the operation was planned by the current government.

From Iquique at 7:30 a.m. on Thursday, 40 individuals departed: 19 Colombians, 17 Bolivians, and 4 Ecuadorians. Among them, 26 faced administrative expulsions and 14 judicial ones for crimes like robbery with intimidation, violence, receiving stolen goods, and drug law violations, according to Sauerbaum.

Pavez outlined the Migration Control Plan: higher frequency of deportation flights, increased migration law inspections, reinforced border control in the Macrozona Norte, departure records, and biweekly expulsions. A voluntary exit mechanism will also be developed.

"The implementation of expulsions for all nationalities is a priority," Pavez stated, clarifying no preferences exist and efforts focus on consular logistics, including with Venezuela despite lacking diplomatic ties.

Sauerbaum noted that since Kast's election, 2,180 Venezuelans have left voluntarily. In the government's first month, 156 expulsions occurred—33% more than in 2022—reaching 196 with this flight, mostly Colombians.

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President Kast signing migration reform bills at the Arica border crossing.
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Kast announces migration reforms during Arica border visit

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President José Antonio Kast signed two bills on Sunday at the Chacalluta Border Complex to extend detention of irregular migrants and penalize their internal transfers.

President José Antonio Kast clarified on Thursday that his campaign promise to expel 300,000 irregular migrants was a hyperbole, not a metaphor, while touring the Atacama region. The remarks follow similar comments he made the previous day that drew sharp opposition criticism.

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Security Minister Trinidad Steinert led a migration operation on Friday in La Vega Central, Recoleta, alongside PDI Director Eduardo Cerna. Seventy-five PDI officers and Carabineros checked 100 foreigners. Thirty were transferred for administrative violations, and three were arrested on pending warrants.

José Antonio Kast's government held its first expanded political committee on Monday at La Moneda, where Segpres Minister José García announced urgencies for 20 bills, mainly on security and migration. Three initiatives received immediate discussion, including classifying irregular entry as a crime. The announcement comes amid internal criticisms over possible pardons and limits to free higher education.

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President José Antonio Kast announced Tuesday the departure of ministers Trinidad Steinert and Mara Sedini in a cabinet adjustment that comes just 69 days into his term.

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