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The US Is About to Deport an Immigrant to the Center of the Ebola Crisis

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Why This Matters

This case highlights the complex intersection of immigration policy, global health concerns, and human rights. The potential deportation of a vulnerable individual to an Ebola outbreak zone raises questions about the ethical responsibilities of the US government amidst public health crises and immigration enforcement priorities.

Key Takeaways

The United States is preparing to deport a 78-year-old retired pastor to Uganda, a country in East Africa near the center of the Ebola outbreak. The pastor also claims to be the target of the country’s authoritarian government.

Edward Nalwamba came to the US from Uganda in 2002 and had been living and working in Colorado while under an “order of supervision,” which is when someone has a deportation order but cannot be immediately removed from the country. This order was revoked in September 2025, his lawyers say, and he has been detained ever since. Nalwamba is set to be deported on Tuesday.

According to his attorney and one of his friends, Nalwamba’s health has declined precipitously in the nine months he has been in immigration detention, adding to concerns about deporting him to an outbreak zone.

Uganda, and its neighbor, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, are at the epicenter of the latest Ebola outbreak, which has killed more than 300 people. Earlier this month, the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) issued a travel health notice for Uganda, encouraging travelers to practice “enhanced precautions.” It’s not clear how many immigrants the US is deporting to Uganda at this time.

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Nalwamba’s case falls at the intersection of several of the major changes ushered in by President Donald Trump’s second administration. Since January 2025, the US government has strangled foreign assistance, killing off the US Agency for International Development almost entirely. Meanwhile, it has pumped billions of dollars into the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and immigration operations.

Nalwamba first arrived in the US on a tourist visa for a religious conference. In 2001, during Uganda’s presidential elections, Nalwamba claims he was one of several people in his town taken from their homes in the middle of the night and interrogated by armed security forces about his relationship to the political opposition, according to court documents filed in 2010. Nalwamba had refused to instruct members of his church to vote for the country’s president, Yoweri Museveni, who has been in power since 1986 and whose government has continued to target members of the political opposition as recently as earlier this year.

During the religious conference, he says, people that Nalwamba knew back in Uganda called him to warn him that political conditions in the country were deteriorating. While he was in the US, Nalwamba received a fax containing threats that made him fear returning home. Nalwamba decided to stay in the US and apply for asylum.

“He feared and has feared all the way up until the present time that if he returns to Uganda, he will be imprisoned or tortured or killed, and the Ugandan authorities have come looking for him several times over the years,” says Joy Athanasiou, the immigration attorney representing Nalwamba.

Athanasiou claims that Nalwamba had issues with his first immigration attorney, who “disappeared without filing the application.” This, and other issues, complicated his application for asylum, and though it was denied, he was issued the “stay of removal.” Nalwamba was arrested on September 18, 2025, and has been held at a detention facility in Aurora, Colorado, that is run by GEO Group, a private prison company.

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