Fewer migrants risk Panama jungle crossing after clampdown – Chicago Tribune

US

The number of migrants walking through the jungles of Colombia and Panama en route to the US has fallen in recent weeks, potentially signaling a further decline in new arrivals at the southern border.

Tighter controls imposed by Panama’s new president and border closures after Venezuela’s disputed election contributed to the drop, according to Elias Solis, president of the Red Cross of Panama, which offers humanitarian and medical assistance to those who make the dangerous trip through the Darien Gap. Many arrive dehydrated and suffering from stomach problems, injuries and emotional trauma, with Venezuelans, Ecuadoreans and Haitians the biggest groups.

Crossings of undocumented migrants across the southern US border have plunged since President Joe Biden’s executive order in June limiting asylum claims, and the Darien Gap data signal the number may fall further. That could be a boon to the presidential campaign of Democrat Kamala Harris as she seeks to blunt attacks from former President Donald Trump, a Republican, that the administration didn’t do enough to secure the border. Polling in swing states by Bloomberg News and Morning Consult has shown immigration is the No. 2 issue for voters in the presidential election, behind only the economy.

“The reduced Darien numbers are certainly a factor preventing the Republican party from taking full advantage of the border as a line of attack against Kamala Harris,” said Adam Isacson, who studies US migration policy at the Washington Office on Latin America. “Even if it’s just a temporary situation, that dog isn’t barking as much right now.”

The number of migrants arriving at the US border with Mexico rose to a record 2.5 million in 2023, but dropped this year. Encounters with US agents declined dramatically in June after Biden’s order, and fell further in July.

Panamanian President Jose Raul Mulino, who was sworn in July 1, has closed six of the seven border crossings between Panama and Colombia with barbed wire fences and increased sea patrols in the area, the Red Cross of Panama said in its July newsletter.

The Darien Gap is a stretch of roadless rainforest between Colombia and Panama linking South and Central America. For centuries, it was considered all but impassible. But last year, more than 520,000 people went through it on the way north, according to Panama’s government.

In the year through July, some 216,000 people crossed the jungles of the Darien Gap from Colombia to Panama, according to Red Cross figures.

Venezuelan vote

Still, the Venezuelan election’s long-term impact on immigration isn’t yet clear, though there could be a spike in coming months, the organization said. President Nicolas Maduro won a third term amid widespread international criticism over the transparency of the electoral process.

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