Immigration issue in Darien hits Panama in the pocket!

Darien

In the first three months alone, almost 66,000 people have crossed the jungle

The migratory crisis worsens and may reach record numbers this year. Almost 66,000 people have crossed the jungle in the first three months of 2023 alone, which is why specialists in migration issues consider that it is time for Panama to seek definitive solutions, because this is costing the country millions of dollars.

Directed spending for migrant care amounts to more than $50 million between 2020 and 2022.

According to Luciano Yanes, a member of the Migration Rights Commission of the National Bar Association, this year’s figure is higher than what was reported in the same period, but in 2022 there were more than 13,000 foreigners.

“This is worrying because this year there will be a record number,” said the jurist, reiterating that Panama has not heard the voice for help that it has requested from the organizations that have to do with the care of migrants and they have left the country alone with the immigration problem.

He cited that the more the flow increases, the more it costs the State that offers shelter, food, medical attention, and security to this population without receiving help.

Every day, 1,000 migrants cross the border sector of Paso Canoas, explained Jorge Bosques, executive of the western brigade of the National Border Service.

But last year there was talk, according to a report from the International Organization for Migration (IOM), that the Darién jungle reached a record number in 2022, doubling that of last year. Almost 250,000 people have crossed into Panama in 2022, compared to around 133,000 in 2021. “If things continue as they are, we will exceed half a million,” Yanes said.

For Nadia Pérez de Singh, a specialist in Immigration Law, this flow shows that controls must be strengthened and measures must be vigorous, because it costs millions of dollars a month that can be used for other needs in the country .

This increase occurs despite the fact that the authorities, such as the Ombudsman, Eduardo Leblanc González, have pointed out that the Darién jungle is not for anyone who is untrained, much less for children.

The director of the National Migration Service, Samira Gozaine, highlighted that 20% of those who have entered Panama this year through the Darién Gap are children and 80% of these children are under 5 years of age, we are talking about a tragedy of incomparable proportions, “Panama in its humanitarian approach does everything possible,” he said.

According to the IOM, last year 36 migrants died trying to cross the jungle area of ​​Darién. This year there are seven, two of them by immersion.

Between January and February 2023, the immigration authorities registered 9,656 children and adolescents out of a total of 45,727 migrants.

No Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Darien
When discussing the horrors of people risking death for a better life,,,,consider 200 BODIES found in Darien.

https://newsroompanama.com/2025/09/14/over-200-unidentified-migrant-bodies-found-in-the-darien/   The Darien Gap, the treacherous stretch of the jungle linking Colombia and Panama, has once again exposed the brutal realities of mass migration: around 200 bodies of migrants who died while attempting to cross the jungle remain unidentified, many buried in makeshift cemeteries without names, their journeys cut …

Human Interest
Mass exodus of 14,000 Venezuelans en route back to Caracas.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/colombia-panama-costa-rica-trump-venezuelan-b2816577.html More than 14,000 mainly Venezuelan migrants who hoped to reach the United States have reversed course and turned south since U.S. President Donald Trump‘s immigration crackdown began, according to a report published Friday by the governments of Colombia, Panama and Costa Rica. The phenomenon, known as “reverse flow” migration, is largely made up of Venezuelan migrants …

EX-Pats
………well according to this post, the answer seems to be YES.

https://newsroompanama.com/2025/09/04/national-police-receive-vehicles-to-strengthen-security-in-tourist-areas/   The National Police’s Special Environmental, Rural, and Tourism Police Service (SEPART) received 19 vehicles through a cooperation agreement signed between the Tourism Authority and the Ministry of Public Security to strengthen security in areas of interest to both nationals and tourists.  The deputy director general of the National …