Migrants_Jungle
Migrants walk through the jungle near the end of their journey through the Darien Gap between Colombia and Panama AFP

Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino announced that U.S.-funded deportation flights for migrants apprehended at the Darien Gap, the heavily-transited route between the country and Colombia, will start on Tuesday, August 20.

Mulino told Univision Noticias has he "feels it in his heart," acknowledging that many people are "escaping" because the "Venezuelan crisis is asphyxiating them."

"Most come from Venezuela. It's a sad situation because they are human beings, to begin with. Families are being torn apart, there are five or six-year old children whose parents died during the journey and now are in Panamanian shelters. We don't know who they are or their names," he added.

Mulino has heavily focused on cracking down on migration through the Darien, a treacherous jungle path used by hundreds of thousands of people on their way up north over the past years. Last year, over half a million people crossed the gap, more than half of them Venezuelans.

After taking office in early July, the Mulino administration implemented a series of measures, including setting up barbed wire in different paths through the path. Jorge Gobea, the director general of the National Border Service, said the measure consists on 3 miles of barbed wire on five trails to channel migrants into a "humanitarian corridor."

"We closes more than five clandestine routes which were used by organized crime to mobilize migrants from Colombia to Panama. The intention was to channel this flow, not to interrupt it, but to send them through one sole route, he said.

The country's National Border Service reported in late July that 11,363 migrants crossed the border since the first day of the month, about 9,000 fewer than the same period last year. Overall, more than 216,000 people have crossed so far. And figures are expected to continue dropping with the flights, not only due to the people effectively deported but also as a result of a deterring effect.

Washington has pledged $6 million in funding for migrant repatriations from the Central American nation in the hope of reducing irregular crossings at its own southern border. The agreement also includes U.S. support for Panama with equipment, transportation, and logistics for foreigners detected within migratory flows that violate Panamanian immigration laws. Mulino detailed earlier this month that the flights will take migrants back to Colombia.

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