Panama’s director of migration, Roger Mojica, told reporters the Indians were deported on a charter flight to New Delhi for “irregular migration.” At the same press conference, US Security Attache for Central America Marlen Pinheiro said Washington was “very grateful to the government of Panama for all this support,” adding, “Irregular migration cannot continue.”
The Darien Gap between Colombia and Panama has become a key corridor for migrants traveling overland from South America through Central America and Mexico to the United States. Despite the dangers, including attacks by criminal gangs, more than half a million undocumented migrants — mostly Venezuelans — crossed the Darien last year.
Transit countries such as Panama and Mexico have come under increased pressure from Washington to tackle the highly contentious migration issue in a US election year. The July deal makes provision for a first phase of deporting migrants with a criminal record, but could see the repatriation of any person entering Panama through the notoriously dangerous and rugged Darien Gap region.