No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsLatin AmericaPanamanian Judge Orders 45 Migrants Held in Prison After Shelter Fire in...

Panamanian Judge Orders 45 Migrants Held in Prison After Shelter Fire in Darién Jungle

A Panamanian judge ordered that 45 migrants arrested after a fight that led to the burning of a shelter in the Darién jungle continue to be held in prison as their case moves forward, the judiciary reported on Tuesday.

The incidents occurred early Saturday morning at a migrant shelter, where an argument between two women escalated into a group brawl and clashes with border police, with no reported victims. Those detained are 38 Venezuelans, six Colombians and one Ecuadorian.

Judge Carlos Justiniani “applied the personal precautionary measure of provisional detention” to the 45 migrants for “crimes against collective security” and “against economic assets,” said the judiciary in a statement.

For its part, the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) expressed concern on Tuesday over these incidents, which it attributed to the “stress” of migrants after crossing the inhospitable Darién jungle on the border between Colombia and Panama on their way to the United States.

In addition, the UN agency warned that the situation could repeat itself due to the record number of migrants arriving in vulnerable conditions at these shelters after traversing a jungle where, in addition to natural risks, gangs assault and rape travelers.

“We are very dismayed and concerned” by what happened, Diana Romero, Unicef’s child protection specialist in emergencies in Panama, said.

According to official information, a dozen light structures and some vehicles were set on fire at the shelter in San Vicente, near the town of Metetí, 180 km east of the Panamanian capital.

In these shelters opened by the Panamanian government there is also staff from international organizations and NGOs to provide basic services to migrants. “We know stress levels were very high and could be one of the triggers that led to this violent situation,” Romero said.

Panama’s Security Minister Juan Pino indicated on Monday that migrants convicted of these incidents will be deported, which Unicef considers generates “uncertainty.”

“What we have identified is that there are pregnant [women] and babies, children and obviously other relatives who were coming with them [the detainees], so a stage of great uncertainty and concern begins for these families,” said the Unicef official.

In the first two months of this year, more than 72,000 people, one-fifth of whom are children, crossed the Darién, a number that exceeds the 50,000 in the same period last year. Almost two-thirds are Venezuelans, followed by Haitians, Ecuadorians, Colombians and Chinese, according to official data.

Trending Now

How Nayib Bukele Consolidated Total Power in El Salvador

No one was surprised. El Salvador’s President, Nayib Bukele, is now officially cleared for indefinite reelection. Congress, firmly under his control, paved the way...

Costa Rica Court Upholds Adults-Only Rule for LGBTIQ+ Pride March Closing Event

In a unanimous decision, Costa Rica’s Constitutional Chamber (Sala IV) has dismissed an appeal challenging the Ministry of Justice and Peace’s reclassification of the...

Costa Rica Battles Rising Cyberbanking Fraud and AI-Powered Scams

Cybercrime is a serious problem in Costa Rica. The number of victims is rapidly growing and so are the different techniques used by criminals...

El Salvador’s Bukele Challenges Critics Over Indefinite Re-Election Reform

Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele rejected on Sunday the notion that the approval of indefinite presidential re-election in El Salvador marks “the end of democracy,”...

IKEA Plans To Open First Store in Costa Rica

IKEA plans to open its first store in Costa Rica after signing a franchise agreement with Sarton Group. The deal announced today gives Sarton...

Costa Rican Party Faces Scandal Over Alleged Lottery Laundering Links

The leadership of the National Democratic Agenda (ADN) party dismissed the entire executive committee of that group in Guatuso after learning of its members'...
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica