The Columbus Dispatch

Iota makes migration crisis worse

-

It's unclear at this point exactly how much death and damage have been inflicted in Nicaragua and Honduras by Hurricane Iota, the second major storm to strike the region in as many weeks. But it will be considerab­le — winds raging at 155 mph stripped roofs from buildings and blew other structures apart as rain drenched land already sodden from the previous storm, Hurricane Eta.

And Iota, which made landfall late Monday, struck before rescue crews could reach remote villages devastated by Eta, which suggests the world is seeing a crisis compounded by an unfolding catastroph­e.

The region was troubled enough before the hurricanes arrived. Rural communitie­s in Honduras and its western neighbor Guatemala have been suffering from five years of drought, and the soaking they received from these storms won't magically end that scourge. The drought has been made worse by climate change, the same force that scientists believe is fueling stronger and more volatile tropical storm systems.

Iota is a case in point. It emerged as a tropical depression and grew into a tropical storm later in the day. By midnight last Saturday it was a Category 1 hurricane, the weakest on the scale; on Monday morning it reached Category 5 status with winds reach topping 160 mph before weakening slightly as it hit the Nicaraguan coast.

The drought already had led to significant human migration from the region as impoverish­ed and starving people dependent on the agrarian economy had little left to keep them in place. With violent gangs wielding significant power, migrants flowed north through Mexico to the U.S., adding to the humanitari­an crisis.

Then came the pandemic to undermine already-weak economies.

The hurricanes will only make these situations worse. It has long been apparent that the best approach for combating migration from Central America is to help stabilize the government­s, disrupt the gangs and build a local and inclusive economy sufficient to support the people who live there.

But that has proved to be a difficult task, exacerbate­d by what seems to be endemic corruption. And absent a short-term fix, the region is likely to see more migration as damage from the hurricanes makes a difficult region in which to live yet more uninhabita­ble.

Add that to the buffet of problems confrontin­g the Biden administra­tion when it takes over Jan. 20.

Los Angeles Times

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States