New York Post

HERE COMES THE NEXT WAVE

Thousands more on way to the US

- By MARK MOORE With Wires

As a massive makeshift encampment of mostly Haitian illegal immigrants on the Texas border was just cleared out, thousands more are making their way from South America to the US border, crossing the perilous Darien Gap in Panama, according to new images and the Panamanian government.

The Darien Gap is a roadless, 66-mile-long stretch of jungle and swamp that links Colombia and Panama — and is known as one of the most inhospitab­le places on Earth.

Along with smugglers and drug trafficker­s, the area is home to a wide array of deadly creatures, from black scorpions to poisonous snakes like the pit viper and gargantuan spiders whose bite can cause death in hours.

People crossing the treacherou­s terrain must also contend with oppressive levels of heat and humidity, torrential downpours and a lack of drinking water.

Images from Sunday show a group of migrants wading across a small stream in the jungle as a mix of men, women and children carrying their belongings, sleeping bags and large bottles of water try to maintain their footing.

In another image, migrants follow a waist-high path cut into the muddy soil surrounded by thick vegetation. Men, some with small children strapped to their chests, lead the way.

The group set out on the fiveday trek through the Darien Gap on Sunday near Acandi, Choco Department, Colombia, on their way to Panama, according to reports.

As many as 4,000 migrants, including Haitians, Cubans and other nationalit­ies, have passed through stations in Darien and Chiriqui, in western Panama, Reuters reported, citing officials with Panama’s security ministry.

Another group of about 16,000 migrants are in Necocli, a beach town in northern Colombia, waiting for boats to take them to the Darien Gap, where smugglers will guide them through the jungle.

Colombia and Panama agreed last month to allow 500 migrants to cross each day, but many are calling for the quota to be increased.

More than 88,000 migrants have entered Panama though the Darien Gap so far this year, Reuters reported, referring to figures from the National Migration Service.

The report said the numbers of migrants entering Panama went from an average of 800 in January to 30,000 in August.

Many Haitians left their home country following a devastatin­g earthquake in 2010 that killed 220,000 people to take jobs in Brazil, Chile, Peru and other South American countries.

But as the jobs dried up, Haitian migrants began the trek north to the United States, enticed by President Biden’s more lenient immigratio­n policies.

Thousands of them arrived in Del Rio, Texas, earlier this month and began camping out under the Internatio­nal Bridge.

The encampment was cleared out last Friday.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas admitted during an interview on “Fox News Sunday” that more than 12,000 Haitian migrants had been released into the United States — and the numbers could increase.

He said roughly 12,400 Haitians are having their asylum claims heard by an immigratio­n judge and another 5,000 are being processed by DHS.

About 3,000 have been detained.

“Approximat­ely, I think it’s about 10,000 or so, 12,000,” Mayorkas responded when asked how many illegal immigrants had already been released.

The number could surpass 5,000 as other cases are processed, he said.

“It could be even higher. The number that are returned could be even higher. What we do is we follow the law as Congress has passed it,” Mayorkas said.

 ?? ?? DANGEROUS: Mostly Haitian migrants Sunday cross the jungle of the Darien Gap, heading from Colombia to Panama on their way to the United States.
DANGEROUS: Mostly Haitian migrants Sunday cross the jungle of the Darien Gap, heading from Colombia to Panama on their way to the United States.

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