U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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USCRI and Global Exchange allied to support returnees in El Salvador

June 2, 2026

By: Carlos García Dorantes, USCRI Latinamerica and the Caribbean officer.

In 2025, returns across Central America became increasingly visible as migration pathways narrowed and deportations from the United States continued to affect thousands of families across the region. In El Salvador, the number of deportees from the United States increased by 90.2% in the first quarter of 2026 compared to the same period of the previous year. According to data from the Directorate General of Migration and Foreigners, total deportations rose from 2,813 in 2025 to 5,351in 2026.

Many people returned abruptly after years abroad, often arriving with no savings, limited support networks, and deep uncertainty about how to rebuild their lives. In many cases, people arrived without knowing where they would sleep, how they would afford transportation, or even how they would access food during their first days back.

Within this context, the gift card initiative implemented by USCRI El Salvador and Global Exchange seeks to provide immediate humanitarian relief during the first 48 hours after return, helping families cover urgent basic needs, while giving them time to react, stabilize, and begin navigating the difficult process of starting over.

For many returnees, the challenges go beyond employment or economic instability. Returning often means facing social stigma, emotional distress linked to detention and deportation processes, and the difficult experience of starting over after years of building a life elsewhere. In many cases, families return carrying debt, uncertainty, and the feeling that they must rebuild everything from the beginning.

Despite all these challenges, people returning and their families keep alive their hopes and expectations for a new future where they belong. As Tatiana Jormery, a participant of USCRI El Salvador’s socioeconomic reintegration initiative, REDII, shared:

“This is what I want to focus on: to be an entrepreneur, to start from scratch, but in my home, in my country, with my family.”

As part of this response, USCRI El Salvador and Global Exchange provided support to 71 newly arrived Salvadoran returnees between the ages of 21 and 66, including older adults, single mothers who are heads of households, and families facing situations of heightened vulnerability. A total of $2,828 USD was allocated from March 26 to May 8 to provide immediate humanitarian assistance during the first days after arrival.

Beyond the economic support itself, many participants described the initiative as something deeper: a gesture of welcome at a moment marked by uncertainty and emotional exhaustion after return.

One beneficiary, a single mother of two, explained:“It’s a great help because we came suddenly, out of nowhere, without preparing. It feels like a welcome to the country. I’m going to buy essential items because they didn’t let us bring anything. This is just to get started. My goal is to start over.”

Another participant shared:“I felt very grateful; it’s a very good benefit. It’s an honour to be welcomed like this in my country. I will buy food for my family. We are going to start fresh.”

For USCRI El Salvador, this initiative seeks to make a difference between arriving in crisis and taking the first step toward rebuilding life with dignity. Humanitarian assistance is the first critical step in the process of reintegration. It can create conditions for stability, belonging, and hope during one of the most vulnerable moments in the migration journey.


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