
Thousands of migrants return home by boat after Trump's crackdown on asylum
Migrants who once risked their lives traversing the jungles of the Darien Gap in search of asylum in the US are now returning to their home countries.
After former President Donald Trump 's crackdown on asylum policies, many migrants, primarily from Venezuela and Colombia, have abandoned their attempts to reach the US.
According to authorities, this has resulted in a 'reverse flow' of migrants.
Speedboats are now transporting them from Panama back to Colombia, navigating the dense jungle rivers near the border.
Many had previously spent months, even over a year, in Mexico, awaiting asylum appointments through the CBP One app, which has since been discontinued under Trump's policies.
Karla Castillo, a 36-year-old Venezuelan traveling with her younger sister, said: 'When Trump arrived and eliminated the application (CBP One) all our hopes went up in smoke.'
The boats depart from a rural part of Panama and cross the seas in packs to reach Colombia.
They were part of a well-oiled migrant smuggling machine, which once raked in money from the steady flow of hundreds of thousands of people headed north nearly a year ago.
The speed boat route, which crosses through the Indigenous Guna Yala lands, was once part of what smugglers called the VIP route, in which migrants paid more so they wouldn't have to take the deadly trek through the Darien Gap.
But now that much of the Darien's migrant smuggling industry has collapsed, smugglers are taking advantage of the reverse migration to charge steep costs to migrants – between $200 and $250 per person, including minors – for the boat rides.
For many passengers it is the last of their money, after having spent almost everything in pursuit of their American dream.
A 'reverse flow' of migrants
Castillo was plagued with 'mix feelings' traveling backward. She was part of a mass migration from crisis-stricken Venezuela, fleeing to other Andean nations like Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and more before deciding to travel to the US.
She lived five years in Chile, a country that as gradually closed its doors to Venezuelan migrants, before she decided to risk her life traveling through the Darien Gap and hopping country-to-country until she reached southern Mexico.
In early February, she and her sister decided to give up when they realized they lost their chance at legally seeking asylum in the US. But she was anxious to return home to her four children and mother, who sent her some money to get home, which she raised from a raffle, she said, sitting in front of a blaring music with other migrants while she waited for a boat.
'Supposedly (the music) is to lighten the mood, but nothing takes away the gloom," she said.
It's unclear exactly how many people cross through the boat route daily, but for weeks, large groups, including several hundred from mainly Venezuela and Colombia, have been flocking to the area, where Indigenous laws govern. They're offered overnight stays and sea transfers.
That falls in line with figures offered by neighboring Costa Rica, which says it's seen between 50 and 75 people crossing through their country going south every day. Though it's just a drop in a bucket to figures seen a year ago, when the government said it saw thousands of migrants headed north daily.
A dangerous journey
Some of the migrants waiting for their boat back to Colombia said they refused to return to Venezuela after the country's recent elections, which have fueled democratic alarm and violence. They'd rather struggle in the same economic and legal precarity they faced for years in other countries, which have long pleaded with the international community for more funds to take on the migratory crisis.
'There's no way I'm going back to Venezuela. There are many of us that don't want to go back. They are going to Peru, Ecuador, Colombia. Just like before," said Celia Alcala as she waited to board a boat.
But the boat rides can also be deadly. There's little police presence at the checkpoints, despite Panamanian authorities saying that boat captains have to follow security measures.
On Friday, one boat disregarded a warning of heavy swells, capsizing while it was carrying 21 people, 19 of them migrants, off the coast of Panama. It claimed the life of one 8-year-old Venezuelan child, according to authorities.
The death fueled concern among many waiting for their boats, like Venezuelan Juan Luis Guedez, who was returning with his wife and -year-old daughter from southern Mexico.
After leaving Chile, where he lived for eight years after fleeing Venezuela, the family waited four months for an asylum appointment, hoping to reunite with family in the U.S.
'I don't know if we will get there alive, but if we make it, the idea is to go back to Chile. My daughter was born there," he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
19 minutes ago
- NBC News
Republicans focus on trans athletes in their early attacks against Jon Ossoff in Georgia
Republicans seeking to unseat Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff in one of the key races of the 2026 midterm elections are leaning heavily into attacks over transgender athletes in women's sports in the early stages of the campaign. In recent weeks, two GOP-aligned outside groups have launched ads on the issue. And GOP Rep. Buddy Carter hit the airwaves with an ad prodding Ossoff on the issue soon after launching his campaign. Republican candidates and campaigns have frequently leaned on culture war issues in recent years as a way to excite the base and frame Democrats as out of touch, particularly in red-leaning states. And they're even more emboldened after President Donald Trump bombarded then-Vice President Kamala Harris with an onslaught of ads that attacked her support for transgender people during the 2024 election. But while Democrats are gearing up for a difficult re-election fight for Ossoff in a state Trump won narrowly in 2024, they think the issue will be drowned out by voters' concerns about the economy, particularly Trump's handling of it. Even so, it's an issue for which Democrats lack a consensus about how to respond to GOP broadsides, as prominent members of the party grapple with whether to embrace protecting the transgender community as part of their values, deflect the question or come out against including transgender athletes in women's sports. Ossoff is the only Democratic incumbent defending a seat in a state Trump won last year, making him far-and-away the top target for Senate Republicans. Still, some Republicans admit that Ossoff will be difficult to beat, particularly now that Gov. Brian Kemp decided not to seek the seat. The early Republican criticism of Ossoff points to the Democratic senator's vote on legislation in February that would make it a Title IX violation (jeopardizing federal education funding) for states to allow transgender women and girls to participate in female sports. The bill failed to get the 60 votes it needed to advance in the Senate. One Nation, the nonprofit aligned with Senate Republicans' main super PAC, has spent at least $400,000 airing an ad reminiscent of a key tagline from one of Trump's anti-Harris ads from last year: 'Man to man defense isn't woke enough for Ossoff, he's playing for they/them.' Carter's opening salvo of ads included a spot touting the congressman's MAGA credentials while a person purporting to be a transgender woman holds sports trophies and stands in front of a transgender pride flag talking about how Ossoff has been an ally to the community. Asked about the GOP criticism of that vote, Ossoff campaign communications director Ellie Dougherty told NBC News in a statement that 'American parents don't need federal bureaucrats confirming our children's genitalia,' a reference to how a state might enforce the mandate in the Republican bill. Scott Paradise, who managed Republican Herschel Walker's losing Senate campaign in 2022, told NBC News that Ossoff's first Senate run in 2020 provided a 'perfect storm' that allowed Ossoff to position himself as a 'centrist' by narrowing his focus to 'bread-and-butter issues.' 'If he's talking about the economy or he's talking about moments where he has stood with the right — whether it's Middle East, to the extent he has on immigration — it's easier for him to muddy the waters. But this is such a black and white issue in a center-right state' that allows Republicans to try to frame him as out of step, he said. Polling broadly shows the American public doesn't support transgender women playing in female sports. Last month's NBC News Stay Tuned Poll, powered by SurveyMonkey found 75% opposed it and 25% supported it. Other national polling has found similar trends. That's one reason why Trump's campaign focused heavily on the issue in ads, arguing that Harris was outside the mainstream and pointing to her past support for gender-affirming treatments for prison inmates. After the election, Democrats have disagreed over whether the party's position on transgender rights, particularly in women's sports cost them electorally. Asked about the attacks last month during an interview on "Political Breakfast," a podcast hosted by Georgia's public radio affiliate, Ossoff said the big early spending is a signal to him that "demonstrates the national GOP understands the strength that I'll be bringing to this re-election campaign." The Democrat called Republicans, particularly GOP political consultants, "obsessed and preoccupied with this issue." Thinking ahead about "top of mind" issues for voters in 2026, Ossoff added, will it be "whether or not federal bureaucrats are investigating the sexual biology of adolescent athletes? I don't think so," he added. Amy Morton, a Democratic strategist in Georgia, elaborated that she believes the midterms will instead be a "referendum on the economy" and Trump's handling of it, emphasizing the Democratic attacks on the GOP's broad policy bill that's working its way through Congress. "They're going to continue to lean into that issue because they don't want to talk about the issues that are really impacting Georgians," she said, adding, "They made a strategic decision to wrap their arms around Donald Trump so there won't be a degree of separation between his failure as an executive and their failure." A Democratic strategist who worked on Sen. Raphael Warnock's successful re-election in Georgia in 2022 added that like their former boss, Ossoff's high-profile elections have helped to define him in the state, making them skeptical that a GOP attempt to brand him as extreme will stick. They added that while Warnock's 2022 Republican opponent, Herschel Walker, leaned heavily on social issues during his unsuccessful bid, Kemp won comfortably with a very different message on the same ballot, showing how a campaign can focus on the issues it wants and leave others to the side. "You saw Brian Kemp run an extremely disciplined race on the economy. You were hard pressed to get Kemp on the record about abortion in 2022 — the man was laser-focused on small businesses, jobs and the economy. That was the consistent message you heard out of Brian Kemp. You compare that to Herschel Walker and, you can do the math: 300,000 votes," the Democrat said. But the economy was also a top issue in the 2024 election, and Trump and the Republican Party still managed to turn their attacks on trans issues into a memorable tagline that stuck with some voters. That's why one national Republican strategist told NBC News that the attack isn't a "replacement" for a cogent economic argument, but "part of the equation. 'It's an issue that obviously had a massive impact in 2024. The Trump campaign's 'Harris is for they/them' ad is one of the greatest ads of our generation in that it's so simple and was so effective,' the strategist said. Ads about transgender participants in women's sports can run "on top of: Oh, he also voted to help ensure that illegal immigrants get government-paid health care and he voted against the Laken Riley amendment in 2024 before it was convenient," the strategist added. While the transgender sports attacks are drawing headlines, both sides have been running ads focused on spending in Washington too. Democrats have attacked the GOP's policy bill working its way through Washington, and Republicans hit Ossoff for backing former President Joe Biden's signature spending bill in 2022. Tharon Johnson, a Georgia Democratic strategist who worked for Biden's 2020 campaign in Georgia agreed that Republicans are "going to be hard-pressed to make Jon Ossoff into this radical" in part because of his work both in office and on the campaign trail. And while he believes the situation Harris found herself in last year isn't the same one Ossoff finds himself in now, he said Democrats can still draw a lesson from it: "Respond sooner, and more effectively." So far, Ossoff's response has been to stay focused on the economy and try to frame the debate as about local control.


Sky News
20 minutes ago
- Sky News
Los Angeles live: Hundreds of marines to be deployed to LA - as California prepares to sue Trump government
More protests are planned in LA today, demanding the end of ICE immigration raids. Donald Trump's government has controversially deployed the National Guard - prompting California to sue his administration - while the Pentagon is to deploy 700 marines. Follow the latest below.


Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trump says 'strange' liberal activist Greta Thunberg needs anger management training after Gaza aid stunt
President Donald Trump called liberal activist Greta Thunberg 'strange' and suggested she needed 'anger management' therapy. Earlier Monday, Israel intercepted the boat that 22-year-old Thunberg and other pro-Palestinian activists were floating toward Gaza, to bring food aid and push for a Palestinian state. During a Monday afternoon White House event, Trump was asked if Thunberg was brought up in his call earlier with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 'Well she's a strange person. She's a young, angry person. I don't know if it's real anger. It's hard to believe. But I saw what happened,' Trump said. 'She's certainly different.' He then floated the idea of 'anger management' for Thunberg. 'I think she has to go to an anger management class. That's my primary recommendation for her,' Trump advised. Trump was also asked if he thought Thunberg was 'kidnapped' by Israel, as the Swedish climate change activist claimed. 'I think Israel has enough problems without kidnapping Greta Thunberg,' Trump said. 'Is that what she said, she was kidnapped by Israel?' Trump later asked a reporter. Thunberg was on board a civilian vessel called the Madleen that was being operated by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, which was intercepted Monday morning by Israel forces. Israel's Foreign Ministry characterized the activists as attention-seeking, calling the boat a 'selfie yacht' filled with 'celebrities.' Trump was also asked about the current status of food aid going into Gaza. 'Gaza right now is in the midst of a massive negotiation between us and Hamas and Israel and Iran actually is involved. And we'll see what's going to happen with Gaza,' Trump said. 'We want to get the hostages back,' he said referring to the Israeli citizens who were kidnapped by Hamas during the October 7, 2023 terror attack. The U.S. was able to get the last American-Israeli hostage back last month, ahead of Trump's trip to the Middle East. The president skipped Israel on his first major international swing, traveling to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.