Panama Repatriates Migrants on U.S.-Funded Flights Amid Border Crisis

panama repatriates migrants on u.s. funded flights amid border crisis

panama repatriates migrants on u.s. funded flights amid border crisis

In a very big way to reduce the flow of irregular migration, Panama has started the deportation of humans on chartered flights financed by the United States. This was done days after President José Raúl Mulino was inaugurated; during his campaigns, he pledged to address the crisis at the Darien Gap; a very dangerous jungle through which thousands of migrants from South America have attempted to cross into the United States. The Biden administration has agreed to pay for these flights as it seeks to discourage what it calls irregular migration. First to be repatriated were 29 Colombians with criminal records.

The Promise of the Panamanian President to Limit Migration

President Mulino has pledged that the number of migrants passing through Panama will be reduced, stating that their condition is ‘sad’ Most of the people crossing the Darién Gap are Venezuelans; there are also Colombians, Ecuadorians, and Haitians. The president had earlier stated that they would first take them back to Colombia, which they used to enter Panama but it was not clear if other flight would be arranged to take them back to their countries.

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The deal with the U. S. Department of Homeland Security seems to aim at the constant migration issue; moreover, the Darien Gap is a natural migration bottleneck for those who want to travel from South to North America. Thus, in 2023, about 520 thousand people crossed the gap on foot, becoming the property of criminal groups that acted as predators in relation to desperate migrants. Measures taken by President Mulino to contain the flow of migrants through the region are part of a broader strategy by the Biden administration against irregular migration.

U. S. Funding and the Possible Outcome

The step forms part of the Biden government’s efforts to tackle escalating immigration pressures on the border between the U. S and Mexico, which is among the major political issues of the moment before the presidential election that is due next year.

The repatriation flights are going to have impacts on the movement of the migrants across the Darien Gap and will act as a discouragement to the others who may try it. The political and economic factors that explain why individuals are fleeing Venezuela and other countries in the region will persist far more profoundly. A longer-term fix, therefore, has to be sought in tackling the causes of the migration crisis through an approach at the source to be provided by the Biden administration and its regional counterparts.

About Wrighter

Wrighter covers news across the global on Human Rights, Migrants Rights, and Labor Rights. Wrighter has vast experience in writing and is a doctor by profession.

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