“Panama cannot end up becoming a black hole for deported migrants,” said Juan Pappier, deputy director of Human Rights Watch ...
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Friday that Washington has notified many U.N. agencies and humanitarian and ...
The number of immigrants held in detention under U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has hit the highest level in ...
Instead of throngs of tourists, every day Diaz sees buses cross from the United States full of deportees. They’re taken to a ...
Boatloads of migrants have returned to South America this week from a new departure point in Panama -- part of an increasing ...
By Wendy Fry and Sergio Olmos, CalMatters Border Patrol agents slashed tires, yanked people out of trucks, threw people to the ground, and called farmworkers “Mexican bitches” during unannounced raids ...
In the past, hundreds of thousands of migrants crossed Panama to make it to the U.S. But now, as Trump has taken office, thousands are headed back, and some are getting stranded in the country.
The dismantling of a Biden-era program for Latin Americans has left them uncertain and their U.S.-based sponsors frustrated.