On Colombian border, migrant families embark on dangerous jungle passage

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The Darien gap is considered virtually impenetrable — yet thousands of people from Haiti, Cuba and Venezuela are making the perilous trek north.

They line up before dawn each day, passports in hand. Thousands of migrants and their children stand for hours in this western Colombian beach town, waiting for a seat on a boat that will take them one step closer to the United States — on an incredibly dangerous leg of the journey.

Migrants pay the equivalent of $40 each to ride the boat from Necoclí to Acani near Colombia’s border with Panama. Then comes the most perilous part of the trek to North America: the Darien Gap, a 60-mile roadless, lawless stretch of jungle run by smugglers and thieves.

Panamanian officials have recovered 50 bodies there this year, but say they believe the death toll is much higher.

Some 90 percent of the estimated 82,000 migrants who have flooded into this once-sleepy town since January of this year were born in Haiti, according to Colombia’s civil protection agency. They live in overcrowded hotel rooms or in tents along the beach, with no bathrooms nearby.

Utnica, 5, watches her mother wash their clothes in a bucket, using soapy sea water. They sit by their tent under the hot sun. They have family in Orlando, Florida. “I want to start a new life and find a job,” Desir, her mother, said.

Last month, the U.S. deported thousands of Haitian migrants that arrived in Del Rio, Texas, citing Title 42, a Trump-era health measure that went into effect in March 2020 during the Covid pandemic and remains in place under the Biden White House.

Still, smugglers are fueling a perception among migrants that they might be allowed to stay in the U.S. if they make the trek.

More than 1,000 migrants are arriving in Necoclí each day, but Panama will only accept 500 per day — creating a huge bottleneck. In the U.S., Homeland Security officials expect there could be a surge of migrants trying to cross the American border in October.

Many of the Haitian migrants had been living in Chile and Brazil since the 2010 earthquake that left 1.5 million homeless in Haiti.  They found work in those countries, until Covid took a toll on the Latin American economies and authorities started cracking down on undocumented immigrants, many of them Haitian refugees.

 

Agencies

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