He was born to a US citizen soldier on an army base in Germany. Now he’s been deported to Jamaica, a country he’d never been to

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By Zoe Sottile, CNN

Jermaine Thomas
Jermaine Thomas plans to seek citizenship in a country he’s never been to (Illustration by Leah Abucayan/CNN/Courtesy of Jermaine Thomas)

Born on a US military base, the son of a US citizen father serving in the Army, Jermaine Thomas never considered he might not be American.

A month ago, he found himself shackled at the wrists and ankles and forced aboard a flight for Jamaica, his father’s birthplace and a country Thomas had never been to before.

“It’s too hard to put in words,” Thomas told CNN. “I just think to myself, this can’t really be happening.”

He is legally stateless, he told CNN. He is not a citizen of the US, although his father was a US citizen; Germany, where he was born at a US military hospital; Jamaica, his father’s homeland; or Kenya, where his mother was born.

Thomas, 39, says he spoke to CNN from a homeless shelter in Kingston, Jamaica, a city where he now finds himself stranded hundreds of miles away from his friends and family after an arrest for criminal trespass led to him being transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody.

Family members told CNN they are scared to visit Thomas out of fear they might be unable to return to the US – caught up in the Trump administration’s sprawling deportation campaign.

Thomas says his only option now is to apply for Jamaican citizenship through his late father. But he does not plan to, since “my life, my kids, my family is back in the States,” he said.

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