Costa Rica’s Immigration Crisis: Hundreds Stranded for Days on Route to the US

2023-09-27 21:56:15
Caption,

Hundreds of people are stranded for several days in Costa Rica during their trip to the US.

Author, Marcos González DíazRole, BBC News World Correspondent in Mexico and Central America

20 minutes

“The number of people arriving exceeds the institutional capacity (…). “We are overwhelmed.”

According to the vice minister of the presidency of Costa Rica, Jorge Rodríguez, his country’s capacity to manage the constant and growing flow of migrants passing through its territory towards the United States has reached its maximum limit.

And this was the reason given by the Costa Rican president, Rodrigo Chaves, for ordering this Tuesday the declaration of a “national emergency” with which he wants to have more economic resources to strengthen the capacities of the institutions in charge of addressing this situation.

The measure was announced after the arrest last week of 25 migrants on the southern border after a confrontation with police officers who were trying to prevent street vendors in the area, which generated serious disturbances and caused great controversy in the country.

Chaves, who will sign the presidential decree this Thursday for the national emergency to come into force, raised the tone and threatened deportations for foreigners who disturb public order in the country.

“I have instructed the Ministry of Public Security to have a firm hand with those few people who think that the gentleness, kindness and generous heart of Costa Ricans can be confused with weakness,” he said.

To migrants who arrive in Costa Rica and “behave badly, disrespecting the authorities, causing disturbances, the message is that they are going back to their country of origin, because we are not going to tolerate it here,” he warned.

Caption,

Thousands of migrants enter Costa Rica through its southern border every day.

How was arrive to this situation?

According to official data from border authorities, as of September 23, more than 390,000 migrants had crossed the dangerous Darién jungle this year that separates Colombia from Panama. This is the highest number ever recorded and far exceeds the 248,000 people who crossed it in all of 2022.

After crossing Panama, Costa Rica is the next country along the migrant route.

Since June, when about 900 migrants a day entered Costa Rican territory through the southern border, the flow tripled to 2,600-2,700 a day in August.

“This situation now warrants declaring a national emergency, due to the number of people who are passing through our territory,” Chaves said.

Once in Costa Rica, migrants take a bus that takes them directly to Los Chiles, on the northern border with Nicaragua.

This transportation was implemented by the Costa Rican authorities to try to avoid crowds of migrants in their territory, but hundreds of them are also stranded because they cannot pay the US$30 that the ticket costs.

This strategy, called “controlled flow,” is also applied in Panama, where migrants previously take a bus to travel directly to the Costa Rican border.

Once they arrive in northern Costa Rica, many migrants resort to the service of “Talibans,” as transporters are known who take them to blind spots on the Nicaraguan border because they cannot pay the US$150 that Managua charges as a safe passage to enter regularly. through the border point of Las Tablillas.

Paso Canoas, symbol of the crisis

But it is Paso Canoas, on the southern border of Costa Rica, the border crossing that has become the greatest example of this migration crisis in the country.

Although there is a migrant reception center about 15 km away, its capacity for less than 300 people was soon exceeded and a few months ago the authorities installed an open space on part of what was the landing strip of an old airfield, just a few five minutes from the border.

The government thus intended to prevent migrants from having to wander through the town, where less than 20,000 people live. But the fact that more than 60,000 people passed through this place alone so far in September, made the services of this improvised camp also completely insufficient.

“The situation is of a dimension that exceeds the capacity of the place and, as soon as you arrive, you are surprised by the overcrowding there is,” Luis Ponte, coordinator of the Doctors Without Borders (MSF) project in the area, tells BBC Mundo.

image copyrightDoctors Without Borders

Caption,

Thousands of people arrive every day at the Paso Canoas camp on the southern Costa Rican border.

The few existing latrines are dirty or collapsed, there are hardly any showers or roofs to protect oneself from the 30 degree temperatures or torrential rains that can last for hours. One of the biggest problems is perhaps the accumulation of garbage which, according to Ponte, can exceed 12 tons in just over a week, with the consequent health risk.

“We are overwhelmed in the possibility of attending to in an ordinary way what these institutions could attend to. “Just the amount of waste that accumulates does not even allow the Municipality of Corredores (to which Paso Canoas belongs) to deal, on a daily basis, with the garbage that is generated there,” the Vice Minister of the Presidency acknowledged this Tuesday.

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Every day large lines form to be able to take the buses to continue the journey north. Between 500 and 600 people sleep each night on cardboard or, the luckiest, in small tents until they raise the money needed for transportation, which can take four or five days.

Caption,

Some migrants remain stranded on the southern border of Costa Rica for up to four or five days until they obtain the money to continue their journey.

To achieve this, the majority resorts to informally selling food or other products on the streets. The situation became tense with some neighbors, who last month temporarily blocked the border and demanded a reinforcement of police to prevent so many migrants from wandering through the community, considering that they could spread diseases.

“People arrive dehydrated and with physical injuries, swelling, viral infections… but also with emotional ailments after having suffered robberies or violence along the way. They come with the need to be listened to with empathy, to feel welcome despite the conditions of that camp,” explains Ponte, whose organization provides its support in the area by delivering medicines, collecting garbage and expanding the covered area of ​​the camp. .

As announced by President Chaves, the authorities will adjust their plan so that migrants board the buses elsewhere to avoid crowding at this point where the situation has already become almost unsustainable.

image copyrightDoctors Without Borders

Caption,

The accumulation of garbage causes unsanitary conditions.

What will this national emergency be for?

According to the country’s National Emergency Commission, the declaration of national emergency will allow the delivery of institutional resources from the State to offer migrants optimal conditions for “safe transit” and to meet the needs of the populations where the greatest number of migrants is concentrated. migrants.

Carlos Sandoval García, a professor at the University of Costa Rica who is an expert in migration, agrees that the declaration of emergency could provide funds to facilitate accommodation and transportation for migrants transiting through the country.

Caption,

Hygiene services are absolutely insufficient for so many migrants who arrive at the space enabled by the authorities on the southern border.

However, avoid considering the current situation as “exceptional.” In his opinion, this decision is due to the usual position that Chaves maintains regarding migration in a country where 10% of its residents are foreigners (mostly of Nicaraguan origin) and where controversy still resonates over recent unrest between migrants and authorities. on the southern border.

“This declaration is part of the president’s rhetorical tone and not so much of an articulated response strategy to what this humanitarian drama is. He is characterized by a confrontational and polarizing style. More than trying to resolve the issue of migration, it is about capitalizing political legitimacy from migration,” he believes.

Caption,

Thousands of people wait every day to take a bus to Nicaragua.

The main solution to this situation, the expert points out, lies in improving conditions in the migrants’ countries of origin to guarantee “their right not to have to migrate.”

“More than a unilateral action by the government of Costa Rica or any other country, what is needed is a regional strategy, a summit of presidents that truly addresses and addresses the migration emergency we are experiencing and prevents forced displacement. Going from the national to the regional is something key that is urgently needed,” he tells BBC Mundo.

This Tuesday, the Costa Rican president was clear in his message to migrants who plan to pass through his territory in the coming months.

“Whoever comes here is going to respect our laws, our police and the towns through which they will travel (…). Those who are considering coming to Costa Rica should begin to meditate,” said Chaves.

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