Current:Home > ContactPanama’s next president says he’ll try to shut down one of the world’s busiest migration routes -Momentum Wealth Path
Panama’s next president says he’ll try to shut down one of the world’s busiest migration routes
View
Date:2025-04-16 01:28:45
PANAMA CITY (AP) — Panama is on the verge of a dramatic change to its immigration policy that could reverberate from the dense Darien jungle to the U.S. border.
President-elect José Raúl Mulino says he will shut down a migration route used by more than 500,000 people last year. Until now, Panama has helped speedily bus the migrants across its territory so they can continue their journey north.
Whether Mulino is able to reduce migration through a sparsely populated region with little government presence remains to be seen, experts say.
“Panama and our Darien are not a transit route. It is our border,” Mulino said after his victory with 34% of the vote in Sunday’s election was formalized Thursday evening. He will take over as president on July 1.
As he had suggested during his campaign, the 64-year-old lawyer and former security minister said he would try to end “the Darien odyssey that does not have a reason to exist.”
The migrant route through the narrow isthmus grew exponentially in popularity in recent years with the help of organized crime in Colombia, making it an affordable, if dangerous, land route for hundreds of thousands.
It grew as countries like Mexico, under pressure from the U.S. government, imposed visa restrictions on various nationalities including Venezuelans and just this week Peruvians in an attempt to stop migrants flying into the country just to continue on to the U.S. border.
But masses of people took the challenge and set out on foot through the jungle-clad Colombian-Panamanian border. A crossing that initially could take a week or more eventually was whittled down to two or three days as the path became more established and entrepreneurial locals established a range of support services.
It remains a risky route, however. Reports of sexual assaults have continued to rise, some migrants are killed by bandits in robberies and others drown trying to cross rushing rivers.
Even so, some 147,000 migrants have already entered Panama through Darien this year.
Previous attempts to close routes around the world have simply shifted traffic to riskier paths.
“People migrate for many reasons and frequently don’t have safe, orderly and legal ways to do it,” said Giuseppe Loprete, chief of mission in Panama for the U.N.'s International Organization for Immigration. “When the legal routes are not accessible, migrants run the risk of turning to criminal networks, traffickers and dangerous routes, tricked by disinformation.”
Loprete said the U.N. agency’s representatives in Panama would meet with Mulino’s team once its member are named to learn the specifics of the president’s plans.
If Mulino could be even partially effective, it could produce a notable, but likely temporary, impact. As with the visa restrictions that unintentionally steered migrants to the overland route through Panama, if the factors pushing migrants to leave their countries remain they will find other routes. One could be the dangerous sea routes from Colombia to Panama.
In a local radio interview Thursday, Mulino said the idea of shutting down the migration flow is more philosophical than a physical obstacle.
“Because when we start to deport people here in an immediate deportation plan the interest for sneaking through Panama will decrease,” he said. By the time the fourth plane loaded with migrants takes off, “I assure you they are going to say that going through Panama is not attractive because they are deporting you.”
Julio Alonso, a Panamanian security expert, said what Mulino could realistically achieve is unknown.
“This would be a radical change to Panamanian policy in terms of migration to avoid more deaths and organized crime using the route,” he said. Among the challenges will be how it would work operationally along such an open and uncontrolled border.
“In Panama, there is no kind of suppression with this situation, just free passage, humanitarian aid that didn’t manage to reduce the number of assaults, rapes, homicides and deaths along the Darien route,” Alonso said. Mulino’s proposal is “a dissuasive measure, yes, (but) whether it can be completely executed we will see.”
It’s also unlikely that much could be accomplished without a lot of cooperation and coordination with Colombia and other countries, he said.
Adam Isacson, an analyst at the Washington Office on Latin America, said that “without considering the risk of returning migrants to dangerous situations, in mathematical terms I don’t know how they hope to massively deport” migrants.
“A daily plane, which would be extremely expensive, would only repatriate around 10% of the flow (about 1,000 to 1,200 per day). The United States only manages to do about 130 flights monthly in the entire world,” Isacson said.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Disability rights advocate says state senator with violent history shoved him at New York Capitol
- Netanyahu fends off criticism at home and abroad over his lack of a postwar plan for Gaza
- Kosovo makes last-minute push to get its membership in Council of Europe approved in a Friday vote
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Rock band Cage the Elephant emerge from loss and hospitalization with new album ‘Neon Pill’
- Indonesia raises alert for Mount Ibu volcano to highest level following a series of eruptions
- Ready, Set, Save: Walmart's Latest Deals Include a $1,600 Laptop for $286, $130 Fan for $39 & More
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Theft of more than 400 vehicles in Michigan leads to the arrest of 6 men
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Haiti’s crisis rises to the forefront of elections in neighboring Dominican Republic
- Father and daughter killed in deadly Ohio house explosion, police say
- NFL responds to Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker's commencement speech urging women to be homemakers
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- 11 people die in mass shootings in cartel-plagued part of Mexico amid wave of mass killings
- Francis Ford Coppola debuts ‘Megalopolis’ in Cannes, and the reviews are in
- Germany’s parliament lifts immunity for prosecution of a far-right lawmaker
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
New York Giants reveal 'Century Red' uniforms ... and they are not spectacular
EA Sports College Football 25 will be released July 19, cover stars unveiled
Giddy Up for Miranda Lambert and Husband Brendan McLoughlin's Matching 2024 ACM Awards Looks
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Michigan beginning alcohol sales at football games following successful rollouts at its other venues
Lifesaving plan: How to back up and secure your medical records
A Palestinian converted to Judaism. An Israeli soldier saw him as a threat and opened fire