Kuwait Times

Ticket to Nicaragua: Migrants seek safer shortcut to US

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PANAMA CITY: Nicaragua has become a hot spot for migrants from around the world seeking to avoid a brutal trek through the Darien Gap jungle — including the 303 Indians whose plane was grounded last week in France on their way to the Central American nation.

Migrants from South American and Caribbean countries, Africa and Asia, have long had to brave the lawless, virtually impassable rainforest that straddles Panama and Colombia, in a bid to reach the United States. However, analysts say that the government of Nicaragua’s iron-fisted President Daniel Ortega, a longtime nemesis of the United States, has deliberate­ly made it easier for migrants to bypass the Darien by flying straight to his country before heading north overland.

Manuel Orozco, a migration expert at the Washington-based Inter-American Dialogue, told AFP that Ortega’s government was facilitati­ng “the business of a network of internatio­nal air services” so that migrants “can reach the border with Mexico and the United States faster.”

“We collected data from more than 500 charter flights,” said Orozco, adding that between April and June, airport authoritie­s had hired “private companies located in Dubai to train officials in the internatio­nal handling of paperwork for these types of flights.”

An Airbus A340 was detained last week at a Paris airport after an anonymous tip-off that it was carrying potential victims of human traffickin­g. After it was establishe­d that the passengers were traveling of their own free will, most of them were flown back to India on Monday. Indian police said the passengers had paid tens of thousands of dollars to agents to help them reach the southern border of the United States.

‘Premeditat­ed’

Orozco said that the Nicaraguan government, which has remained mum on the matter, benefits from the cost of visas or tourist cards — depending on the nationalit­y of the arriving passenger — as well as landing taxes. He said Nicaragua “conceived” this new air route “in a premeditat­ed manner faced with the opportunit­y to worsen the migration crisis to the United States and, in the process, make money.”

Liliana Bakayoko, a lawyer for the Romanian airline operating the flight, told AFP that Nicaragua had approved the passenger list before the plane departed. All foreigners need to get prior approval from immigratio­n authoritie­s to enter the country.

From the capital Managua, migrants travel to Honduras and Guatemala, then to Mexico to the southern border with the United States, paying thousands of dollars to smugglers. This allows them to avoid the Darien Gap, where on top of the dangers of the thick jungle, rivers, and wild animals, they are preyed upon by criminal gangs and face sexual violence.

Panamanian authoritie­s say over half a million people have made it through the jungle in 2023 — double the amount the previous year. Most of those braving the Darien Gap are Venezuelan­s fleeing economic misery, but there are also Ecuadorans, Haitians, Cubans, Chinese, Vietnamese, Afghans and Africans from Cameroon or Burkina Faso.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM) has said the “most significan­t trend has been the shift by Cuban migrants and those coming from African nations who are increasing­ly choosing air routes to reach Central America, sidesteppi­ng the Darien to continue their northbound trip.”

Honduras migration statistics show a five-fold increase in arrivals from countries like Guinea, China, Senegal, India, Afghanista­n and Angola, who cross into the country from Nicaragua. Orozco said that Nicaragua has also become a “springboar­d” for Cubans and Haitians taking charter flights since visa requiremen­ts for those countries were scrapped in 2021. Others take regular commercial flights to El Salvador, which in October imposed an airport transit fee of $1,130 on Africans and Indians.

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