Global Migrants Brave Panama’s Vipers, Bats, Bandits to Reach U.S.
Global Migrants Brave Panamas Vipers, Bats, Bandits to Reach U.S.
Africans, Asians, Cubans cross the treacherous jungle of the Darien Gap
By Sara Schaefer Muñoz
May 29, 2015 11:43 a.m. ET
- video -
METETÍ, PanamaAhmed Hassan staggered through dense Panamanian jungle, crazy with thirst, his rubber sandals sliding in the mud, fearing he would die thousands of miles from his homeland in Somalia.
I told my family I would go to the U.S., that was the plan, said the 26-year-old truck driver, who said he fled late last year when al-Shabaab militants took his village. He flew to Brazil and made a cross-continental bus trip to Colombia.
In March came his biggest test: crossing the Darien Gap that connects South America with Panama and Mr. Hassans ultimate goal, the U.S.
There was no water. There were snakes, he said in a small holding center in Metetí, north of the jungle, gashes and bites covering his legs under his traditional sarong. I thought I might die in that jungle.
More:
http://www.wsj.com/articles/why-u-s-bound-migrants-brave-panamas-brutal-jungle-1432914231