Jamaica Gleaner

Punishing hurricanes to spur more Central American migration

-

AT A shelter in this northern Honduran city, Lilian Gabriela Santos Sarmiento says back-toback hurricanes that hit with devastatin­g fury this month have overturned her life. Her home in what was once a pretty neighbourh­ood in nearby La Lima was destroyed by flooding.

The 29-year-old woman, who never finished middle school, had managed to build a life for herself, most recently cleaning COVID-19 wards at a local hospital. Now, having lost everything, she says she sees no future in Honduras at her age and with her level of education.

“I think that in Honduras it is very difficult to do again what it took me 10 years to do,” Santos said. So her plan is to leave for the

United States.

“If there’s a caravan, I’m going,” she said, referring to the large groups of migrants who make the arduous journey together, often on foot.

IMPROVISED CAMPS

Inside shelters and improvised camps across Central America, families who lost everything in the severe flooding set off by the two major hurricanes are arriving at the same conclusion.

According to the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, more than 4.3 million Central Americans, including three million Hondurans, were affected by Hurricane Eta alone. Those numbers only rose when Iota, another Category 4 storm, hit the region last week.

The hurricanes’ destructio­n comes on top of the economic paralysis caused by the COVID19 pandemic and the persistent violence and lack of jobs that have driven families north from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador in great numbers during recent years. Add an element of hope from the incoming government of President-elect Joe Biden, and experts predict the region is on the verge of another mass migration.

“This is going to be much bigger than what we have been seeing,” said Jenny Arguello, a sociologis­t in San Pedro Sula who studies migration flows. “I believe entire communitie­s are going to leave.” “The outlook is heartbreak­ing.” It’s still early. Tens of thousands remain in shelters, but those along the migration route have already started to see storm victims begin to trickle north.

Eta made landfall on November 3 in Nicaragua, leaving a path of death and destructio­n from Panama to Mexico. Iota hit the same stretch of Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast on November 16, pouring more rain on still-flooded countries. At least 150 people were killed and more than 100 remain missing.

The same day Eta landed, US voters elected Biden amid a pandemic that has devastated the continent for more than eight months. The Democrat has promised a more compassion­ate approach to immigratio­n, even as desperate families weigh their options inside mud-filled Central American homes.

 ?? AP ?? A pregnant woman is carried out of an area flooded by water brought by Hurricane Eta in Planeta, Honduras. Thousands of homes were damaged and the infamous gang violence has not relented in Honduras, where some residents said gangs were charging a tax to boats trying to rescue people from flooded neighborho­ods.
AP A pregnant woman is carried out of an area flooded by water brought by Hurricane Eta in Planeta, Honduras. Thousands of homes were damaged and the infamous gang violence has not relented in Honduras, where some residents said gangs were charging a tax to boats trying to rescue people from flooded neighborho­ods.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica