To: Kaslin
Check out
ILLEGALS from All Over the World Travel Through the Darien Gap to Enter the U.S.:
Ahmed Hassan staggered through dense Panamanian jungle, crazy with thirst, his rubber sandals sliding in the mud, fearing he would die thousands of miles from his homeland in Somalia.
I told my family I would go to the U.S., that was the plan, said the 26-year-old truck driver, who said he fled late last year when al-Shabaab militants took his village.
He flew to Brazil and made a cross-continental bus trip to Colombia.
In March came his biggest test: crossing the Darien Gap that connects South America with Panama and Mr. Hassans ultimate goal, the U.S.
There was no water.
There were snakes, he said in a small holding center in Metetí, north of the jungle, gashes and bites covering his legs under his traditional sarong.
I thought I might die in that jungle.
Migrants go to extremes for new beginnings.
Honduran families put children on northbound trains.
Hundreds of Africans recently drowned braving the Mediterranean in an overcrowded boat.
People cross the deadly Sonoran Desert to get from Mexico to Arizona.
The untamed Darien Gap has become a new route for travelers from as near as Cuba and as far as Nepal.
The surge reflects the difficulty of entering the U.S. by traditional paths like arriving on a visa and overstaying, said Marc Rosenblum, a deputy director at the Migration Policy Institute, a Washington think tank.
These people are willing to take this risky and complicated route, he said, and they are lining up to take it.
U.S. justice and immigration officials say they are working to combat human smuggling on such routes.
We will continue using all of our investigative authorities to identify and dismantle these transnational criminal organizations, said Barbara Gonzalez, Senior Adviser to Latin America at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.
The circuitous Panama route has become more attractive, say migration experts, thanks to the easing of visa and asylum requirements in some South American countries and an unwillingness by some governments on the route to carry out mass deportations. ...
3 posted on
01/08/2019 7:37:14 PM PST by
Yosemitest
(It's SIMPLE ! ... Fight, ... or Die !)
To: Yosemitest
And the question that’s never asked, “How did Ahmed the poor Somali truck driver, get the money to fly all the way to Brazil”?
To: Yosemitest
The chinese are smarter. They enter with tourist visas and stay via the airlines. We know a lot of chinese who have done this.
To: Yosemitest
Interesting... Thanks.
Please disregard the FReepmail I just sent to you by mistake. 🙂
29 posted on
01/08/2019 7:57:56 PM PST by
nutmeg
To: Yosemitest
I considered moving to be Panama. Then I found out about 100 feet inland from the beautiful beaches is swamp.
To: Yosemitest
Why didn’t this guy go somewhere closer to Somalia?
Also, I have to wonder who is arming the militants who are causing havoc in the world. Someone profits from this.
73 posted on
01/08/2019 10:13:46 PM PST by
Aria
To: Yosemitest
He was safe once he left his homeland; so why didn’t he STAY in the first country he landed in?
84 posted on
01/08/2019 11:14:07 PM PST by
Elsie
(Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson