MALDITO DARIEN

The Darién Gap is a dense and treacherous jungle corridor between Colombia and Panama that has become the most dangerous land route for migrants heading toward the United States. Once considered nearly impassable, this roughly 66-mile stretch of rainforest has evolved into a major migration artery. In recent years, hundreds of thousands of people have braved this passage.

But the numbers now tell a dramatic story of collapse. Data from early 2025 show that between January and March only about 2,800 migrants crossed the Darién — a drop of more than 98% compared to previous years. This sudden decline reflects more than geography; it marks a profound shift in policy and deterrence strategy.

Migrants from Venezuela, Haiti, Ecuador, and increasingly from Africa, Asia, and the Middle East have used this passage to escape violence, poverty, and political upheaval. They face unimaginable risks: nearly impassable rivers, flooding, wild animals, tropical diseases, armed bandits, sexual violence, and disappearance.

Today, however, the journey north continues only in fits and starts. Under stricter enforcement measures introduced by the Trump administration and new cooperation agreements with countries such as Panama and Mexico, migrants are being blocked, detained, or returned before they reach Central America. Camps in the Darién that once teemed with thousands each day now sit nearly empty.

This dramatic drop has left thousands of families stranded in limbo — caught between the jungle they survived, the obstacles ahead, and the walls of policy that now stand in their way..

Indietro
Indietro

The Path

Avanti
Avanti

Vale do Javari