Current:Home > ScamsMigrants flounder in Colombian migration point without the money to go on -OceanicInvest
Migrants flounder in Colombian migration point without the money to go on
Chainkeen Exchange View
Date:2025-04-11 08:08:03
NECOCLI, Colombia (AP) — For Venezuelan Jennifer Serrano, $1,000 is a fortune beyond reach. Without it, she has no hope of continuing with her three children and husband on the long road to the U.S., which first means crossing the dangerous Darien Gap jungle.
She has to gather the money in Colombian pesos because the devalued bolivars of her native Venezuela don’t add up.
Her children — aged 9, 8 and 5 — are constantly throwing up, sick with diarrhea and the flu from living in plastic tents on the beach of Necocli, a coastal Colombian town near the Darien jungle that forms the natural border between Colombia and Panama.
They arrived two months ago and for now see little chance of leaving.
“We didn’t know it would be so expensive. They had told me it would cost 160,000 pesos ($37) to travel through the Darien and we brought no more than 400,000 pesos ($93) and that’s gone to food and the children have gotten ill,” said Serrano, 29.
Her situation isn’t unique in Necocli. It is common to see migrants selling basic necessities like food and water or asking for help from any new faces they see arriving to gather money to continue on the route north.
The town’s local economy has shifted, now revolving around the migrants who have been arriving for several years.
Those hanging around no longer number in the thousands, as in 2021 after Haiti’s earthquake. Now there are just dozens, but they are stuck, most of them Venezuelans and a few from Asia and from other Latin American countries.
It’s common for houses to rent rooms by the day and for people on the streets to sell survival equipment for the jungle — rubber boots, water purification tablets, raincoats, plastic bags, water.
Sitting in a plastic chair on the town’s main street, Carolina García, 25, breastfeeds her 2-year-old daughter while offering water, soft drinks or cigarettes for less than a dollar in a town where more migrants than tourists pass through.
“This gives us something to eat, and we’re investing and we’re saving money to immigrate,” said García, who came to Necocli with her daughter and partner a month ago from Barinas, a city in west-central Venezuela.
Aníbal Gaviria, the governor of Colombia’s Antioquia state, has been warning for weeks about the situation in Necocli and in nearby towns like Turbo and Mutata, where other migrants are also stranded for lack of money.
Migration has become a profitable business in the area. Self-styled “guides” charge each person $350 for boat passage to Acandi, where they enter the Colombian jungle and climb to the “flag hill,” where the most dangerous, Panamanian section of the route begins.
For about $700, migrants can take another route, where the guides promise to avoid the jungle entirely and go by sea to Panama. However, boats can be wrecked on the open sea, or stopped by authorities.
In 2021, a boat leaving Necocli for the San Blas archipelago in Panama was wrecked with some 30 people on board. Three of them died and an 8-month-old baby was reported missing.
Migrants face robbery, extortion, rape and death along the jungle route plagued by “coyotes.” Police in the Uraba region, where Necocli is, say 54 people have been arrested this year for smuggling migrants.
So far in 2023, more than 400,000 migrants have crossed the Darien jungle, 60% of them Venezuelans, Panama’s national migration agency says. Ecuadorian, Haitian, Chinese and Colombian migrants have been the next most numerous, followed by dozens of other nationalities. The once impenetrable jungle has become an organized and profitable migration highway.
The dollar charges for continuing on from Necocli, which change over time, are well known to migrants. Serrano, from Venezuela, counted the money she didn’t have in her pocket as she watched a boat untie from Necocli’s dock, with migrants carrying bags covered in plastic to protect them from rain and the rivers that must be crossed in the jungle.
Serrano, her husband and their children do not have bags suitable for the jungle. They have only a tent, and wash their clothes with water from a public tank for migrants before drying them in the sun on the dock.
Living in these conditions has made her rethink whether to continue. She also fears making it through the jungle only to be deported from the U.S. back to Venezuela under a new directive from Biden administration.
“I’ve talked to my mom and I start crying. I tell her I can’t take this anymore,” Serrano said, her voice breaking. “We want to go back, get to Pasto,” a city in west Colombia, “where my husband has a brother. We have asked for help, but we have not found any.”
veryGood! (55693)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Oregon university pauses gifts and grants from Boeing in response to student and faculty demands
- Deion Sanders vows at Colorado spring game that Buffaloes will reach bowl game
- Attorneys for American imprisoned by Taliban file urgent petitions with U.N.
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Student anti-war protesters dig in as faculties condemn university leadership over calling police
- Teen accidentally kills his younger brother with a gun found in an alley
- Los Angeles 'Domestead' listed for $2.3M with 'whimsical' gardens: Take a look inside
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Can a new dream city solve California’s affordable housing problem? | The Excerpt
Ranking
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- We're not the sex police: Here's what intimacy coordinators actually do on film and TV sets
- Washington mom charged with murder, accused of stabbing son repeatedly pleads not guilty
- Alaska’s Indigenous teens emulate ancestors’ Arctic survival skills at the Native Youth Olympics
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- NFL draft picks 2024: Live tracker, updates on final four rounds
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Dressing on the Side
- CDC: Deer meat didn't cause hunters' deaths; concerns about chronic wasting disease remain
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
How to design a volunteering program in your workplace
Tom Holland Proves Again He's Zendaya's No. 1 Fan Amid Release of Her New Film Challengers
College protesters seek amnesty to keep arrests and suspensions from trailing them
Bodycam footage shows high
Student anti-war protesters dig in as faculties condemn university leadership over calling police
She called 911 to report abuse then disappeared: 5 months later her family's still searching
The Best Early Way Day 2024 Deals You Can Shop Right Now