May 20, 2024

Migration through the Darien Gap is cut off following the capture of boat captains in Colombia


The movement of hundreds of migrants every day through the treacherous migratory freeway, the Darien Gap, has been cut off following the capture of a quantity of boat captains who had been ferrying the migrants to the place to begin of their jungle trek.

The stoppage started when Colombian regulation enforcement captured two boat captains in the northern metropolis of Necoclí on Monday. The firms that employed them halted all transport providers in protest, successfully slicing off the formally estimated 2,000 folks a day that enter the jungled passage hoping to succeed in the United States.

It has led to a construct up of as many as 8,000 folks ready to cross between Colombia and Panama, the Colombia’s Ombudsman’s Office confirmed Thursday. The workplace, a governmental human rights watchdog, has warned that the buildup might “overwhelm the well being system, meals provide, amongst different issues.”

“We can’t wait until things collapse and it ends in a violation of human rights” of already vulnerable migrant populations, said Carlos Camargo Assis, the head of the office.

The chaos has once again underscored the long road ahead for officials in Latin America and the United States as they struggle to take on record levels of migration, and unravel the increasingly lucrative migrant trafficking industry.

President Joe Biden has pressured Colombia and other Latin American nations to crack down on regional migration headed to the U.S. southern border. While many Latin American countries have boosted enforcement, the jungles of the Darien Gap have remained a lawless swath of the migratory route north, largely controlled by Colombia’s most powerful drug gang, the Gulf Clan.

Last year, more than 500,000 people crossed the Darien Gap, many traveling from Venezuela, and other Latin American, African and Asian countries. From there, migrants wind up through Central America and Mexico and land on the U.S. Mexico border, where authorities came across migrants 2.5 million times in 2023.

The unprecedented influx of people has returned to the spotlight in the lead-up to the November 2024, and both Biden and former president Donald Trump planned to pay visits to the border on Friday.

The captured boat captains had been transporting more than 150 migrants from Necoclí across a stretch of the Caribbean to another Colombian city from which they began their trek north, Colombia’s Prosecutor’s Office said Wednesday.

The captains worked for two tourist transport companies, which prosecutors said were a front for transporting migrants, charging between $140 to $300 a head for traveling just a handful of miles by sea.

Such companies take advantage of migrants’ vulnerability to line their own pockets, said one official with the Prosecutor’s Office, who asked not to be named because he wasn’t authorized to speak on the matter.

“They cost them absurd quantities of cash (to journey) with out even the primary safety situations. They pack them in like canned sardines,” the official said in an interview with The Associated Press. “They trick them, they lie to them.”

He said the captures were meant to send a warning to those involved in trafficking, and to “break the chain” of the illegal industry of transporting migrants, which has grown more lucrative as migration has surged in the Americas. But he said the system in the Darien Gap is now so entrenched that he worries that when they capture one trafficker, “two more pop up.”

With no clear finish to the stoppage in web site, the Ombudsman’s Office expressed concern that issues might solely worsen. The small inhabitants 20,000 city of Necoclí confronted an identical construct up of greater than 10,000 migrants three years earlier than, successfully collapsing the metropolis.



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