Miami Herald

In Senegal’s capital, Nicaragua is a hot ticket among travel agents as migrants try to reach U.S.

- BY BABA AHMED Associated Press

DAKAR, SENEGAL

Gueva Ba tried to reach Europe by boat from Morocco 11 times, failing on each attempt. Then, in 2023, the former welder heard about a new route to the United States by flying to Nicaragua and making the rest of the journey illegally by land to Mexico’s northern border.

“In Senegal, it’s all over the streets — everyone’s talking about Nicaragua, Nicaragua, Nicaragua,” said Ba, who paid the equivalent of about $10,000 to get to Nicaragua in July with stops in

Morocco, Spain and El Salvador. “It’s not something hidden.”

Ba, 40, was deported from the U.S. with 131 compatriot­s in September after two months in detention, but thousands of other Senegalese have gained footholds in the

U.S. Many turn to savvy travel agents who know the route — touted on social media by those who’ve successful­ly settled in the U.S.

They are part of a surge in migration to the United States that is extraordin­ary for its size and scope, with more people from far-flung countries accounting for crossings at the border. And as with this route used by the Senegalese, more are figuring out plans, making payments, and seeking help via social networks, and apps like WhatsApp and TikTok.

Arrests for illegal crossings on the U.S. border with Mexico reached record highs in December. The flow slowed for January, but arrests have topped 6.4 million since January 2021. And Mexicans account for only about 1 in 4 arrests, with the others coming from more than 100 countries.

U.S. authoritie­s arrested Senegalese migrants 20,231 times for crossing the border illegally from July to December. That’s a tenfold increase from 2,049 arrests during the same period of 2022, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Many cross in the remote deserts of western Arizona, as Ba did, and California.

Word of the Nicaragua route began spreading early last year in Dakar and took hold in May, said Abdoulaye Doucouré, who owns a travel agency that sold about 1,200 tickets from Dakar to Nicaragua in the final three months of 2023, for the equivalent of several thousand dollars each.

“People didn’t know about this route, but with social networks and the first migrants who took this route, the informatio­n quickly circulated among migrants,” he said.

Some are motivated by Senegal’s political turmoil — authoritie­s delayed February’s presidenti­al election by 10 months — but the sudden draw seemed to hinge largely on social media posts and the spread of the route informatio­n there.

Spikes attributed to social media have occurred in other West African nations, whose people have historical­ly turned first to Europe to flee. Mauritania­ns have arrived at the U.S. border with Mexico in similarly large numbers, and migrants from Ghana and Gambia have come, too.

Many are eventually released in the U.S. to pursue asylum claims in immigratio­n courts that are backlogged for years with more than 3 million cases.

Passports from many African countries carry little weight in the Western Hemisphere, making the journey by land to the United States difficult even to begin. Senegalese can fly visa-free to only two countries in the Americas: Nicaragua and Bolivia, according to The Henley Passport Index. Nicaragua is much closer than Bolivia and lies north of the notoriousl­y dangerous Darién Gap in Panama, so that northbound migrants who land in Nicaragua do not have to face the ordeal of Darién.

As U.S. sanctions against Nicaragua’s repressive government have increased, the government of President Daniel Ortega has used migration to push back.

The Nicaraguan government went so far as to hire a Dubai-based firm to train Nicaraguan civil aviation to manage national immigratio­n procedures for charter flight passengers. More than 500 charter flights landed from June to November, mostly from Haiti and Cuba, according to Manuel Orozco, the director of the migration, remittance­s and developmen­t program at the Inter-American Dialogue.

But migrants like Ba, who are from farther afield, also made their way to Nicaragua on connecting commercial flights from Africa. In African capitals, migrants typically buy multileg tickets from travel agents connecting through Istanbul or Madrid, followed by stops in Bogotá, Colombia, or San Salvador, El Salvador, before ultimately arriving in Managua, Nicaragua. From there, they meet smugglers offering to take them to the Honduran border, or arrange the trip all the way to the U.S.

The U.S. State Department has called on Nicaragua to “play a responsibl­e role” in managing hemispheri­c migration, but that has yet to be seen. Nicaraguan first lady and Vice President Rosario Murillo did not respond to a request for comment on the surge in extra-continenta­l migration through her country.

In October, El Salvador began charging $1,130 for citizens of 57 largely African countries and India transiting the country’s airport. Authoritie­s said most of those charged were on their way to Nicaragua aboard Avianca, a Colombian commercial carrier.

El Salvador’s fee caused airfares from Dakar to rise toward the end of 2023, said Serigne Faye, an agent at the Touba Express travel agency in Senegal’s capital. Some passengers instead fly through Bogotá. Stopovers in Turkey are the most expensive.

While most asylum claims fail, the immigratio­n court backlog means that people can remain in the U.S. for years, with eligibilit­y for work permits. The asylum grant rate for Senegalese was 26% in the U.S. government’s budget year ended Sept. 30, compared with 14% for all nationalit­ies, according to Justice Department figures.

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 ?? SYLVAIN CHERKAOUI AP ?? Gueva Ba sells used cellphones in Dakar, Senegal, on Feb. 1. Ba, who tried 11 times to reach Europe via Morocco, flew legally to Nicaragua and traveled north illegally by land and entered the U.S. He was deported in September.
SYLVAIN CHERKAOUI AP Gueva Ba sells used cellphones in Dakar, Senegal, on Feb. 1. Ba, who tried 11 times to reach Europe via Morocco, flew legally to Nicaragua and traveled north illegally by land and entered the U.S. He was deported in September.

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