PUERTO CARTÍ, Panama (AP) - They once braved the jungles of the Darien Gap, trekking days along the perilous migrant passage dividing Colombia and Panama with a simple goal: Seek asylum in the U.S.
They crossed the Darien Gap to reach the US. Now, boat-by-boat, migrants are returning
PUERTO CARTÍ, Panama (AP) - They once braved the jungles of the Darien Gap, trekking days along the perilous migrant passage dividing Colombia and Panama with a simple goal: Seek asylum in the U.S.
Now, boat-by-boat, those migrants - mainly from the Andean nations of Venezuela and Colombia - have given up after President Donald Trump's crackdown on asylum, and are returning to the countries they once sought to escape.
A pair of those speed boats zipped through dense jungle-cloaked rivers near the Colombia-Panama border on Sunday, headed south. Inside were dozens migrants clinging to their backpacks and shielding themselves from the water’s spray.
Many of those same people waited months, sometimes more than year in Mexico to get an asylum appointment in the U.S. through a Biden-era CBP One app, which ended under Trump.