Children of Venezuelan migrants play ball in Puerto Cartí, on Panama's Caribbean coast, Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025, where their families are camping out before boarding boats to Colombia on their
The Holland America Line cruise ship left Port Everglades on Feb. 2 and traveled through the Caribbean, Colombia, Panama and Costa Rica over 12 days.
Dozens of Venezuelan migrants boarded small boats on an island off the Caribbean coast of Panama on Monday, setting off towards Colombia by sea as part of a reverse migration of families who have given up trying to reach the United States.
A boat with 19 migrants from Venezuela and Colombia and two crew sank off Panama, border police in charge of the rescue operation said Saturday.
A boat carrying 19 migrants, part of a “reverse flow” of migrants who once hoped to reach the United States, capsized off Caribbean coast of Panama
Panama is detaining in a hotel nearly 300 people from various countries deported by the United States, not allowing them to leave while waiting for international authorities to organize a return to their countries.
The group of unauthorized migrants, which includes children, were bused to the camp late Tuesday night. “It looks like a zoo, there are fenced cages,” said one of the detainees.
A boat carrying 19 South American migrants blocked from entering the United States sank off the coast of Panama as they returned to their home
Map locates Panama City, Panama, and the Darién Gap along the border of Panama and Colombia. Muzaffar Chishti, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank ...