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15-fold rise in migrant children crossing Panama jungle to US: UN

by French Press Agency - AFP

Panama City Mar 30, 2021 - 11:04 am GMT+3
Migrants cross the Tuquesa river after a trip on foot through the jungle to Bajo Chiquito, Darien Province, Panama, on Feb. 10, 2021. (AP Photo)
Migrants cross the Tuquesa river after a trip on foot through the jungle to Bajo Chiquito, Darien Province, Panama, on Feb. 10, 2021. (AP Photo)
by French Press Agency - AFP Mar 30, 2021 11:04 am

The number of U.S.-bound migrant children crossing the dangerous Darien jungle in Panama on foot has increased more than 15-fold in recent years and is likely to rise further during the pandemic, the U.N. children's agency warned Monday.

Children accounted for just 2% of these migrants in 2017 but that had risen to more than 25% in 2020, UNICEF said in a statement.

The Darien Gap jungle, the only land corridor between Colombia and Panama, is "one of the most dangerous routes in the world due to the mountainous terrain, wildlife and insects, as well as the presence of criminal organizations," the agency added.

Crossing the vast, roadless Darien Gap rainforest is the only option for U.S.-bound migrants traveling overland from South America. Most of those making the crossing are Haitians and Cubans, but there are also some Asians and Africans.

"I've seen women step out of the jungle carrying their babies in their arms after walking for more than seven days without water, food or any kind of protection," said Jean Gough, UNICEF regional director for Latin America and the Caribbean.

Over the past four years, more than 46,500 migrants, including 6,240 children and adolescents, have crossed the inhospitable jungle. The number of minors increased from 109 to 1,653 between 2017 and 2020, UNICEF said.

In 2019, a peak of nearly 4,000 children made the crossing. Half of them were under five years old and many arrive injured and with serious physical and psychological problems.

Experts believe more and more migrants are choosing to travel with their families, including young children and pregnant women, to avoid being deported to the different countries they pass through.

"These families are pushing their own limits and putting their lives in danger, often without realizing how much of a risk they are taking. Those who manage to eventually cross this perilous border are physically and mentally devastated," Gough added.

Migration across the dangerous jungle is likely to increase in the next months due to the economic crisis and unemployment generated by the COVID-19 pandemic, coupled with violence and climate change, UNICEF said.

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