Los Angeles Times

Panama aids U.S. mission to stop flow of migrants

-

NICANOR, Panama — Panama launched a security operation along its shared border with Colombia on Friday to combat criminal gangs and migrant smugglers involved in record-setting migration through the perilous Darien Gap this year.

Security officials said Operation Shield is part of the agreement reached with the government­s of Colombia and the United States in April to stop the flow of migrants through the border’s jungle-clad mountains.

At a naval air base in Panama’s far east Darien province, rifle-toting border police outfitted in camouflage were conducting drills Friday on the tarmac in front of helicopter­s previously donated by the U.S. government.

Panama will dedicate some 1,200 immigratio­n agents, border police and members of the naval air service to what it said will be an air, land and sea effort. The targets will not be the hundreds of migrants traversing the dense jungle each day, but the organized criminal groups that prey on and profit from them on both sides of the border.

“This is an action by the Panamanian government against criminals who are earning fortunes from human pain,” Security Minister Juan Manuel Pino said. The campaign was the first visible example of the efforts promised by the three government­s.

He said the U.S. is in the process of replacing six of Panama’s helicopter­s with eight new ones.

In recent years, the roadless Darien Gap between Colombia and Panama has become a major and increasing­ly well-establishe­d migration route for extra-continenta­l migrants seeking to reach the United States. Its location on the narrow isthmus makes it a natural point to try to gain control of migration flows, but its remoteness and lawlessnes­s have long made that a challenge.

On Sunday, Panamanian border police encountere­d nine people suspected of robbing migrants, and police killed three of them in a shootout.

Oriel Ortega, director of the border police, said Friday that the dominant criminal group operating in the Darien was Colombia’s Gulf Clan.

The gang terrorized much of northern Colombia to gain control of major cocaine smuggling routes through thick jungles north to Central America and into the U.S. It also moves weapons and migrants.

Smaller gangs work along the Colombia-Panama border as well.

The number of migrants encountere­d at the U.S. southern border has fallen significan­tly since coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns on requesting asylum at the border were lifted and replaced with expanded legal pathways and more punitive measures for those who try to enter illegally.

Pino, Panama’s security minister, said that gaining control of its border with Colombia was no longer just an immigratio­n problem, but a question of national security. “It is easier now to traffic a person than to traffic a kilo of drugs,” Pino said.

Officials dismissed any suggestion of closing the border. It was the first visible example of the efforts promised by the three government­s.

“Our country is not a migratory destinatio­n, nor does it produce emigration, but its geographic position makes it an obligatory route for this phenomenon,” Pino said.

He noted that since 2009, 663,000 people had crossed the Darien, most of them in just the last couple of years.

In April, the United Nations warned that the unpreceden­ted number of crossings to start the year suggested that some 400,000 migrants could cross this year. According to government data, nearly 170,000 migrants crossed the Darien in the first four months of the year, five times the number from the same period last year.

Panama plans a publicity campaign to drive home the message that the Darien should not be an option for migrants.

Pino noted that about 60% of the people crossing Darien this year have been children.

Samira Gozaine, director of Panama’s immigratio­n agency, said smugglers lure migrants to the route with false promises that it will take only two days to cross the steep mountains and rushing rivers rather than a week or more.

So far this year, Panamanian authoritie­s have reported recovering at least 24 bodies believed to be migrants and have received reports of some 40 missing migrants.

 ?? Arnulfo Franco Associated Press ?? BORDER POLICE in Nicanor, Panama, do drills as part of Operation Shield, a security operation on the Panama-Colombia border to combat migrant smugglers.
Arnulfo Franco Associated Press BORDER POLICE in Nicanor, Panama, do drills as part of Operation Shield, a security operation on the Panama-Colombia border to combat migrant smugglers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States