|
 |
|
|
 |
Cuban
Immigrants
Headed
to
US
By
Way
of
Panama,
Colombia
METETI,
Panama
–
Led
by
smugglers
armed
with
knives
and
machetes,
Mayra
Reyes
and
14
other
Cubans
sloshed
through
swamps
and
rivers
and
suffered
hordes
of
mosquitoes
as
they
struggled
across
the
notorious
Darien
Gap
between
Panama
and
Colombia,
the
only
north-south
stretch
of
the
Americas
to
defy
road-builders.
The
route
across
the
Darien
Gap
arose
partly
because
many
Cubans
are
now
using
the
South
American
nation
of
Ecuador
as
the
start
of
their
path
to
the
United
States.
President
Rafael
Correa
eliminated
visa
requirements
for
Cuba
in
2008,
as
other
countries
in
Latin
America,
including
Mexico,
made
it
harder
for
Cubans
to
reach
their
shores.
|
After
walking
for
three
days,
the
group
reached
the
foot
of a
steep,
scrubby
mountain.
There,
the
smugglers
peeled
away
and
told
the
Cubans
they
would
have
to
press
ahead
alone.
"I
thought
I
was
going
to
have
a
heart
attack,"
the
32-year-old
hairdresser
from
Havana
told
The
Associated
Press.
"What
the
guides
did
was
get
us
to
the
mountain,
where
we
had
to
wait
for
nightfall
while
these
green
and
black
poisonous
frogs
got
on
top
of
us."
Hundreds
of
Cubans
like
Reyes
are
taking
that
arduous
new
route
toward
the
United
States,
trekking
across
the
85
miles
(135
kilometers)
of
steamy
tropical
jungle
that
divides
Colombia
and
Panama,
through
mountains,
ravines,
and
muddy
ground
teeming
with
poisonous
reptiles,
jaguars,
wild
boars,
guerrillas
and
drug
traffickers,
And
after
that,
they
still
face
a
journey
across
1,700
miles
(2,700
kilometers)
and
six
countries
to
reach
the
United
States.
Panamanian
immigration
authorities
detained
800
Cubans
near
the
border
with
Colombia
from
January
through
the
first
week
in
July,
compared
to
400
in
all
of
2011.
"We
have
detained
up
to
90
people
in
one
week,"
said
Frank
Abrego,
director
of
Panama's
National
Borders
Service.
Thousands
of
islanders
over
the
decades
have
used
rudimentary
rafts
to
travel
the
90
miles
(150
kilometers)
that
separate
Cuba
from
the
United
States,
but
that
journey
can
be
deadly,
and
the
U.S.
Coast
Guard
has
been
patrolling
the
Florida
Straits
more
aggressively,
halting
many
before
they
can
reach
Florida.
Most
Cubans
who
reach
U.S.
soil
can
stay,
but
those
intercepted
at
sea
are
usually
returned
to
their
homeland,
and
U.S.
figures
indicate
that
more
than
1,000
have
been
stopped
at
sea
so
far
this
year.
So
Cubans
have
turned
to
land
routes.
Nearly
90
percent
of
all
undocumented
Cubans
who
make
it
to
America
now
come
overland,
usually
through
Mexico,
rather
than
reaching
U.S.
shores
by
boat,
according
to
U.S.
Customs
and
Border
Protection.
The
route
across
the
Darien
Gap
arose
partly
because
many
Cubans
are
now
using
the
South
American
nation
of
Ecuador
as
the
start
of
their
path
to
the
United
States.
President
Rafael
Correa
eliminated
visa
requirements
for
Cuba
in
2008,
as
other
countries
in
Latin
America,
including
Mexico,
made
it
harder
for
Cubans
to
reach
their
shores.
All
a
Cuban
needs
is
an
exit
permit
from
the
Cuban
government
and
a
letter
of
invitation
from
a
citizen
of
Ecuador,
where
some
people
sell
such
letters
for
$300
to
$500.
If
Cubans
have
a
letter
of
invitation
and
prove
they
can
finance
their
travel
abroad,
it's
relatively
easy
to
get
an
exit
permit
if
they
are
not
doctors,
scientists,
military
or
members
of
other
professions
deemed
high
value
by
the
government.
The
result
has
been
a
flood
of
islanders
traveling
to
the
South
American
nation,
which
borders
Colombia
along
the
Pacific
Ocean.
"Going
to
Ecuador
is
the
easiest
way
right
now
to
get
out
of
Cuba,"
said
Andy
Gomez,
a
senior
political
fellow
at
the
University
of
Miami's
Institute
for
Cuban
and
Cuban-American
Studies.
"For
the
majority,
Ecuador
is a
stopping
point
but
they
have
to
come
up
with
the
money
to
get
to
their
final
destination,
the
United
States,"
he
said.
According
to
Ecuadorean
official
figures,
between
2007
and
February
2012,
106,371
Cubans
entered
the
country
legally
and
97,923
left
legally.
It
is
unclear
what
happened
to
the
other
8,448.
In
Ecuador,
many
Cubans
work
to
save
money
to
pay
smugglers
to
take
them
to
Mexico's
border
with
the
United
States,
a
route
shared
with
many
Central
American
migrants
who
have
to
cross
territory
controlled
by
drug
traffickers
and
who
often
face
extortion
and
kidnapping.
Few,
though,
cross
the
Darien,
one
of
the
world's
most
rain-drenched
regions.
While
several
thousand
indigenous
people
live
along
its
trails
and
rivers,
the
jungle
is
so
dense,
the
ground
so
swampy
or
mountainous,
that
the
few
attempts
to
cross
it
by
car
or
motorcycle
have
taken
weeks
or
months.
That
terrain,
and
fears
of
environmental
damage
to
its
wild
ecosystem,
have
continued
to
frustrate
planners
trying
to
link
South
and
North
America
with
the
Pan-American
Highway.
Panamanian
authorities
began
noticing
five
years
ago
that
the
Darien
Gap
was
being
used
by
migrant
smugglers,
usually
to
move
people
from
Asia
and
Africa
who
had
traveled
to
the
area
by
boat
from
Brazil,
said
Jose
Mulino,
Panama's
public
safety
minister.
That
has
tapered
off.
Panamanian
immigration
officials
have
detained
just
97
non-Cuban
migrants
in
the
area
since
the
start
of
the
year.
"That
traffic
of
Africans
and
Asians
has
considerably
decreased,
and
the
big
problem
we
have
now
is
the
flow
of
Cubans
who
are
coming
through
the
jungle,"
Mulino
said.
The
Cuban
migrants
are
sharing
dangerous
paths
used
by
drug
traffickers
and
rebels
of
the
leftist
Revolutionary
Armed
Forces
of
Colombia,
Mulino
said,
That
has
sometimes
caused
problems
for
local
law
enforcement.
Police
recently
had
to
call
off
a
drug
raid
after
spotting
a
group
of
Cubans
near
the
border,
Abrego
said.
"We
had
to
get
them
out
of
there
and
take
them
to
Panama
City,"
he
said.
"We
lost
the
raid's
effectiveness."
Authorities
have
yet
to
determine
if
their
guides
work
for
either
group,
Mulino
said.
"It's
not
clear
if
the
rebels,
or
the
drug
traffickers,
or
both,
are
the
ones
guiding
the
migrants,"
Mulino
said.
"Someone
is
helping
them
and
those
people
are
the
ones
who
walk
that
area."
Mildred
Morales,
a
34-year-old
Cuban
nurse
who
was
part
of
Reyes'
group,
said
she
paid
$300
just
to
cross
the
border
into
Panama.
She
had
spent
about
$1,000
since
leaving
Ecuador
three
days
earlier.
"From
the
moment
you
leave
Ecuador
you
have
to
pay
people
off,
police
and
immigration
officials
in
Ecuador
and
in
Colombia,"
the
Havana
woman
said.
"This
is
not
cheap."
After
climbing
the
mountain,
the
group
walked
another
six
hours
to a
river.
From
there,
Panamanian
authorities
detained
them
and
took
them
eight
hours
by
canoe
to
the
town
of
Yaviza,
where
the
Pan-American
Highway
ends
in
Panama.
From
there,
they
went
by
car
to a
detention
shelter
in
the
town
of
Meteti.
The
Cubans
remained
in
Meteti
for
several
days
until
immigration
authorities
gave
them,
like
most
Cuban
migrants,
a
temporary
permit
allowing
them
to
be
in
the
Central
American
country
as
long
as
they
report
to
authorities
every
two
weeks.
Authorities
in
Meteti
say
it's
rare
to
see
the
Cubans
again.
Like
everyone
in
the
group,
Morales
was
nursing
dozens
of
mosquito
bites
and
thinking
about
the
rest
of
the
journey
north.
"We
don't
know
what
kind
of
problems
we'll
face
in
the
rest
of
the
countries,"
Morales
said.
"We
have
heard
from
other
Cubans
that
it
is
possible
to
reach
Mexico's
borders
with
the
United
States."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
| |