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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    MORE THAN 700 AFRICAN ILLEGALS ALLOWED TO TRAVEL THROUGH PANAMA EN ROUTE TO U.S.

    MORE THAN 700 AFRICAN ILLEGALS ALLOWED TO TRAVEL THROUGH PANAMA EN ROUTE TO U.S. THIS YEAR

    Teresita Chavarria/AFP/Getty Images
    by EDWIN MORA25 Aug 2015Washington, D.C.2

    The number of Africans who have illegally traveled through Panama on their way to the United Sates has more than doubled so far this year, reaching more than 700, according to a Spanish-language news report.

    That figure only accounts for those who have been apprehended by Panamanian authorities. When apprehended the immigrants are not deported. They are allowed to pass through instead. The illegals spend no longer than a week in Panama.

    According to an August 8 report by the Spanish EFE news agency that went largely unnoticed by English-language media, in 2015 alone, “708 Africans have crossed the Darien jungle [in Panama] in search of the American dream.”


    In just one year, the number of immigrants from Africa who have traveled illegally through Panama on their way to the United Sates has increased by 134 percent, adds that report.


    “They were not deported because it is difficult to do so. Their countries of origin have no diplomatic representation in Panama and the process becomes complicated. In addition they are in transit, so you let them go,” Domingo Flores, the migration supervisor for the areas of Darien and San Blas, told EFE.


    The migrant and economic crisis affecting Europe and the open door policy of some Latin American countries such as Ecuador, are behind this “abysmal” surge of immigrants, explained Frank Abrego, the chief of Panama’s National Border Service.


    Many African immigrants are choosing to travel through the “inhospitable and hostile” Panamanian jungle to reach the United States, rather than cross into Europe through the Sahara desert and the Mediterranean Sea, described as a “cemetery,” notes the report.


    “The United States is better than Europe, there are more opportunities for us there, and it is much safer.

    The [Mediterranean] sea and the Sahara desert (Morocco) are extremely dangerous,” an Eritrean told EFE in perfect English, choosing not to give his name.


    The vast majority of Africans traveling through Central America are males from Somalia,
    a failed state troubled by famine and Islamist terrorism, adds EFE.


    “I almost died. That jungle is hell,” added Abdi Wahab Ali Osman, a 29-year-old Somalian, describing his journey through Panama’s Darien territory, nearly 8,000 square miles of tropical rainforest along the Colombia-Panama border controlled by drug traffickers and guerrillas from Colombia.


    Somalia, Eritrea, and other African countries are found on a list of 35 nations described in a November 2004 U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) memo as “special interest countries.”


    The inspector general for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security described special interest countries as those “that have shown a tendency to promote, produce, or protect terrorist organizations or their members.”


    Human trafficking “mafias” charge the African immigrants who end up traveling through Panama between $3,000 and $4,000 for an airline ticket to Brazil and Ecuador. From there, they travel to the border between Colombia and Panama where they encounter the immense and roadless Darien jungle, where they have to travel by foot for four or five days.


    The human traffickers “wait for no man,” an 18-year-old man from Somalia told EFE on condition of anonymity.


    Many immigrants die in the Darien jungle, “defeated by fatigue and the elements,” reports the Spanish news agency.


    Africans are not the only foreign nationals trying to reach the U.S. through the Panamanian rain forest. Many of them are from Nepal.


    According to a Panamanian border agency, 215 Nepalese immigrants crossed the Darien jungle in just the last two weeks of July, 150 more than during the same period in 2014.

    During the Ebola outbreak in Africa last year, Gen. John Kelly, commander of U.S. Southern Command, warned that a “large percentage” of illegal immigrants attempting to enter the United States through Mexico are from West Africa.

    He noted that West Africans are traveling through Central America on their way to the United States.

    In March 2015, Gen. Kelly cautioned that Islamic extremists could exploit the knowledge of human trafficking organizations in Latin America to infiltrate the U.S.

    He added that foreign nationals from countries like Somalia, where Islamist terrorist groups such as al Qaeda and al Shabaab are known to operate, could be seeking to enter the U.S. to do Americans harm.

    Gen. Kelly mentioned that a group of Liberians were spotted on the Costa Rica-Nicaragua border on their way into the U.S. illegally. Costa Rica borders Panama.

    Breitbart News
    , citing a leaked report from the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS), reported that illegal aliens from Somalia with ties to terrorist organizations have been working to bring other suspected terrorists into America through the Texas border.


    In 2014, at least 474 illegals from terrorist-linked countries, some of them located in Africa, were apprehended trying to enter the U.S.

    http://www.breitbart.com/big-governm...u-s-this-year/

    Last edited by JohnDoe2; 09-02-2016 at 09:11 PM.
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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  3. #3
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    Won't see this in the New York Times or any other newspaper unfortunately. Breitbart rocks! They actually do investigative reporting.
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jean View Post
    Won't see this in the New York Times or any other newspaper unfortunately. Breitbart rocks! They actually do investigative reporting.
    The Wall Street Journal had an article in May 2015.

    Global Migrants Brave Panama’s Vipers, Bats, Bandits to Reach U.S.

    Africans, Asians, Cubans cross the treacherous jungle of the Darien Gap

    Migrants are braving danger, violence and disease  to make the perilous journey through Panama’s mountai ns and jungles, hoping to find a new beginning in  the north. Photo: Carlos Villalon for The Wall Street Journal


    By SARA SCHAEFER MUÑOZ
    May 29, 2015 11:43 a.m. ET 233 COMMENTS

    METETÍ, Panama—Ahmed Hassan staggered through dense Panamanian jungle, crazy with thirst, his rubber sandals sliding in the mud, fearing he would die thousands of miles from his homeland in Somalia.

    “I told my family I would go to the U.S., that was the plan,” said the 26-year-old truck driver, who said he fled late last year when al-Shabaab militants took his village. He flew to Brazil and made a cross-continental bus trip to Colombia.


    In March came his biggest test: crossing the Darien Gap that connects South America with Panama and Mr. Hassan’s ultimate goal, the U.S.


    “There was no water. There were snakes,” he said in a small holding center in Metetí, north of the jungle, gashes and bites covering his legs under his traditional sarong. “I thought I might die in that jungle.”


    Migrants go to extremes for new beginnings. Honduran families put children on northbound trains. Hundreds of Africans recently drowned braving the Mediterranean in an overcrowded boat. People cross the deadly Sonoran Desert to get from Mexico to Arizona.


    The untamed Darien Gap has become a new route for travelers from as near as Cuba and as far as Nepal. The surge reflects the difficulty of entering the U.S. by traditional paths like arriving on a visa and overstaying, said Marc Rosenblum, a deputy director at the Migration Policy Institute, a Washington think tank.


    “These people are willing to take this risky and complicated route,” he said, “and they are lining up to take it.”


    U.S. justice and immigration officials say they are working to combat human smuggling on such routes. “We will continue using all of our investigative authorities to identify and dismantle these transnational criminal organizations,” said Barbara Gonzalez, Senior Adviser to Latin America at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.


    The circuitous Panama route has become more attractive, say migration experts, thanks to the easing of visa and asylum requirements in some South American countries and an unwillingness by some governments on the route to carry out mass deportations.


    That has opened the door to migrants arriving in South America by plane or cargo ship who head overland toward the isthmus from Brazil. Then, facing miles of dense, roadless jungle, they have a choice: cross on foot or pay gangs to ferry them around it on flimsy coastal-fishing boats.


    Boats are quicker but more expensive. And while Panama turns back anyone who disembarks without a passport, it allows in those emerging from the jungle route without documentation because there isn’t a nearby Colombian outpost to return them to. There also aren’t direct flights from Panama to Africa and Asia.


    There is still the journey through Central America and Mexico, but migrants say the Darien is the hardest. “I want to get to the U.S.,” said Hawa Bah, 20, who fled Guinea in West Africa. She spoke as she lay weak on a cot in a Panamanian holding center after getting lost in the Darien for more than 10 days.


    “I was being forced into marriage, and I was worried about Ebola,” she said. “I’d rather have died in the jungle than go back.”


    RELATED






    It isn’t clear how many make the journey, but the numbers recorded by Panama police are rising. In all of 2014, Panama processed 8,435 migrants, three-quarters of whom boarded boats in Colombia and came via the choppy waters along the isthmus, Panamanian authorities say.

    In the first three months of 2015 alone, Panama processed about 3,800 migrants on the route, roughly 1,000 of whom came through the jungle.


    Most migrants crossing through the jungle turn themselves in, knowing they can receive temporary refuge and be sent on their way if they pass criminal checks. Panama says it releases most, offering paperwork to apply for asylum or refugee status. Most slip away and continue north, police say.


    The journey begins


    The journey for many begins by paying “agents,” as they call members of international smuggling networks, sometimes thousands of dollars to arrange plane tickets, ground transport and bribes to border guards. Others go alone.

    African migrants interviewed in Panama said they head to the U.S., rather than Europe, because they believe they are more likely to get a job and refuge there.


    Immigration authorities across the region and United Nations aid workers say such travelers have flooded into countries like Brazil and Ecuador. Asylum requests in Brazil rose to 5,882 in 2013 from 566 in 2010, according to U.N. data. In 2008, Ecuador lifted visa requirements for foreigners who arrive for tourist stays. It later modified its visa policy for some, but many Cubans who pass through Panama still fly to Ecuador first.




    Critics like Otto Reich, former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, have said Ecuador’s open-door stance may result in a threat to the U.S. And Panamanian officials “know they are coming to the U.S. and then once here they will no longer be Panama’s problem,” said Mr. Reich, who heads a government-relations and trade-consulting firm.

    Javier Carillo, director of Panama’s National Migration
    Service, says it is unfair to blame Panama for the problem, since migrants arrive illegally and pass through some nine other countries on their way to the U.S. A spokesman for Colombia’s immigration authority said it combats human smuggling and offers migrants the opportunity to apply for asylum or safe-conduct papers.


    Brazil’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it “is not aware of this human trafficking route.” Officials at Ecuador’s immigration authority didn’t respond to requests for comment. Ecuador’s Foreign Ministry has said the country doesn’t support criminal activity.


    Cubans, who say crossing the Florida Straits has become too tough, are the biggest group flowing across and around the isthmus. Others from far-off countries are also arriving in growing numbers: Panama processed 210 Somalis crossing the Darien this year through March, up from 60 in the year-earlier period.


    Bloodsucking bats


    The ecologically rich but inhospitable area of roughly 8,000 square miles known as the Darien jungle has long tested those entering.

    The Spanish conquered the Inca empire nearly five centuries ago but struggled to dominate the Darien. In the 1690s, a group of Scots created an outpost on the coast but succumbed to disease, malnutrition and Spanish attacks. In 1854, U.S. Navy Lieutenant Isaac Strain led a canal exploration party that was lost there for days, hobbled by parasites and starvation. He declared it impassable, and the canal site was moved farther north.


    The Darien is the only section of the Pan American Highway from Alaska to Argentina that has never been completed. The highway ends in the Panamanian hamlet of Yaviza and picks up about 50 miles later in northwestern Colombia. The rain-soaked terrain between is home to hundreds of rare species, including vipers and jaguars, and to bloodsucking bats and mosquitoes that can carry malaria.


    “It’s one of the hottest and wettest places on the planet,” said Gen.Frank Abrego, head of Panama’s border police, “and these people who are crossing are not prepared.”


    It is also home to the 57th Front of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, a rebel group that takes a cut from human-smuggling outfits, locals and Panamanian authorities say. A drug-trafficking gang, the Urabeños, operates along the isthmus’s eastern neck.


    For migrants, the roughly 40-mile trek can turn into a dayslong nightmare. Smugglers abandon most on the Colombian side, and they wind up lost and exhausted, say migrants and border police. They gulp turbid river water, triggering skin boils and diarrhea. Decomposing bodies are visible along jungle paths.


    “My friend couldn’t walk, he collapsed. I tried to push him to move but he couldn’t,” said Jawed Khan, 42, from Pakistan, who crossed in March. Panamanian border police found his friend and helped him to safety.


    The groups usually stumble into Paya, a hamlet of thatched-roof huts about 10 miles from the Colombian border with a Panamanian border-security outpost. The forces offer water, food and basic medical assistance, and they venture in to retrieve those who collapse.


    Scenes Along Darien Gap Migration Routes


    U.S.-bound migrants brave deep jungle, criminal gangs, choppy waters

    Many Africans and Asians who make it to Paya have ditched their passports long before, often on the advice of people smugglers in Brazil who warn that they will be deported if they have documents showing their visas have run out; others never had legal travel documents. Authorities transfer them to holding centers like the one in Metetí, fingerprint them and cross-check with U.S. and other databases for criminal history and terrorist links.

    Most continue toward America. U.S. policy allows Cubans to seek residency. People who can claim political, religious or other persecution in their home countries—such as Somalis fleeing a militant group—are more likely to be allowed to remain and seek asylum. But many who cross into Panama don’t have clear plans for how they will get into the U.S.

    Mr. Hassan said his journey began in November when al-Shabaab, known for attacks on civilians in Somalia and Kenya, demanded a male recruit from every home in his village, Saacow. He deplored the group’s violence and needed to keep working to support his wife, daughter and elderly parents.

    His family had heard of a complicated route to the U.S., he said, and his parents urged him to leave that night. They gathered what money they could from friends and relatives as his sobbing wife packed his clothing. “She kept asking, ‘When are you coming back?’ ” Mr. Hassan told her he didn’t know.


    At 2 a.m., he kissed his sleeping 2-year-old daughter and jumped onto a cornmeal truck bound for Mogadishu. There, he heard that the militants, finding him gone, severely beat his 74-year-old father.


    He traveled to Nairobi, then made his way to Brazil on a tourist visa. He wasn’t prepared for the Darien. “This jungle was too hard,” he said. “I was wishing I hadn’t left Somalia.”


    Speaking at the Metetí holding center, Mr. Hassan said he hadn’t spoken with his family in months. He has no family in the U.S. and isn’t sure how he will get in.


    Others avoid the jungle, taking wooden motorboats from the Colombian coastal town of Turbo. Migrants say they pay the Urabeños gang $700 each for the five-hour ride.


    Robbed and murdered


    The water route, too, poses risks. In the coastal town of Acandí lies the tomb of Roberto Tremble, a Cuban who was 33 last year when people smugglers robbed and murdered him, local authorities said. A graveyard worker in Turbo said he has buried a dozen Somalis who were robbed and thrown overboard.

    Migrants arrive in Panama mostly penniless. They say police at Colombian checkpoints threaten to deport them unless they hand over cash, watches and cellphones. A Colombian police spokesman said the force doesn’t tolerate corruption and aggressively investigates such allegations. He said criminal gangs have been known to impersonate police.


    In Panama, the migrants usually work briefly—as domestics, in construction, at carwashes—or receive wired funds from relatives to keep going.


    On a humid March afternoon, Panamanian police in an outpost on a coastal ridge spotted a boat loaded with migrants. It was in Colombian waters, so they couldn’t detain the smugglers who dropped off their human cargo to sneak across the border.


    Minutes later, Yamil Gonzales, a Cuban, staggered up an incline above the beach, wheezing. “Agua,” murmured Mr. Gonzales, 45, collapsing against a tree as companions frantically dug through black garbage bags for water.


    Soon, he was plowing through underbrush littered with bottles and broken sandals left by prior processions.


    “It’s been hard, really hard,” said his wife, Yalile Alfonso, 47.

    “But in Cuba, there’s nothing. We had to come this way.” The couple was well-prepared, with passports, detailed plans to take buses to the U.S. border and knowledge of U.S. asylum laws.


    The Panamanian authorities were waiting, and allowed them in.


    But unlike the jungle route, this approach is close to Colombia, so border authorities can easily deport migrants without passports. That was Mohammed Khan’s fate. A father of four from Swat, a Pakistani area plagued by Taliban violence, he had landed with Mr. Gonzales. Months before, people of his village had pitched in $7,000 for his trip, he said.


    A small pack on his back, Mr. Khan, 38, looked elated as he scrambled down the slope toward the tiny town of La Miel. People had told him Panama police would be hospitable.


    But he had dumped his passport much earlier. The border authorities shook their heads as he pleaded: “Please, please, help me.” They marched him back up the mountain to Colombia.


    Early this month, Mr. Khan texted that he re-entered Panama via the jungle, where he had seen “a lot dead.” He was in Guatemala, waiting to head north.


    “Go USA,” he texted. “Plz pray.”

    http://www.wsj.com/articles/why-u-s-...gle-1432914231
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    Mexico issuing transit visas to African migrants flocking to U.S.-Mexico border

    I stand corrected in my earlier statement above. There is some reporting of this after all.
    ~~~

    Published September 03, 2016Fox News Latino

    MEXICO CITY (AP) – Mexican immigration authorities say 424 migrants from African countries arrived at the southern state of Chiapas over two days last week.

    The National Immigration Institute said Tuesday that it has issued them 20-day transit visas that will allow the migrants to reach the U.S.-Mexico border, where they plan to request asylum.

    Officials call it an unusual surge and say most of the migrants first went to Brazil or Ecuador to start their journey through Latin America.

    Most of the Africans presented themselves voluntarily to immigration officials in the Chiapas town of Tapachula. They did not specify their nationalities.

    Immigration support staff in Tijuana has been aiding migrants from the Congo, Somalia and Ghana to arrive at the U.S. port of entry at San Isidro.

    http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/new...ican-migrants/
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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