Flood of forlorn Venezuelans brave jungle crossing in Panamá 

Flood of forlorn Venezuelans brave jungle crossing in Panamá 

Photo: Munir uz Zaman

 

Wading through knee-deep mud, some limping, hundreds of Venezuelan migrants battle against fatigue with their eye on the prize: hope for a new life in the United States.

By Digital Journal – Juan José Rodríguez and Luis Acosta

Oct 19, 2022

With sore feet, injuries and dented spirits several days into their ordeal – still far from halfway – they trudge in single file through the infamous Darien Jungle linking Colombia to Panamá.





With a long way still ahead through Central América and México, the group of men, women and children, some babies, already has many horrors to recount.

And it may all have been in vain.

Last week, the United States announced that Venezuelans arriving by land without travel documents will be returned to México.

For Jesus Arias, 45, sometimes one has to “risk one’s life to have a future.”

“But honestly, I would not advise anyone to come through the jungle. It is very hard,” he told AFP as he and others arrived at an Indigenous settlement in Panamá, Canaan Membrillo – one of several border control points in the 575,000-hectare (1,420,900-acre) jungle.

Arias arrived at Canaan Membrillo in a T-shirt and shorts, carried by other men in the group after injuring his knee.

– ‘We’re going anyway’ –

He undertook the journey knowing it would be tough because “there is no future in Venezuela. Every day it gets worse.”

He may have no choice but to go back to the crisis-hit country, which is wracked by violence, insecurity and a lack of essential services. The UN Refugee Agency says 6.8 million refugees and migrants have left Venezuela since 2014.

Under the US decree, only 24,000 Venezuelans who apply under a humanitarian program will be granted entry.

“We’re going anyway,” said Arias. “Even if we are stopped, at some point we will enter.”

The number of Venezuelans making the Darien crossing reached a record high in 2022 – some 133,000 between January and mid-October, according to authorities in Panamá.

For the whole of last year, the figure was 2,800.

Venezuelan Nelida Pantoja, 46, saw “many dead, many mountains, many rivers that carried off many people… It was horrible,” she told AFP at Canaan Membrillo.

But like most of her fellow migrants, she vowed to “keep trying” until she gets into the United States.

Darwin Vidal, 33, said he was struggling to garner the strength for what lay ahead: battling not only rough terrain but also being at the mercy of poisonous snakes and other wild animals, as well as criminal groups.

Read More: Digital Journal – Flood of forlorn Venezuelans brave jungle crossing in Panamá

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