Panama to launch migrant deportation flights in coming weeks, US says
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Panama's new president, Jose Raul Mulino, took office on Monday
PANAMA (Reuters) - Panama will launch deportation flights for irregular migrants in the coming weeks, part of a deal with the United States, a US official said, after the new president in the Central American country pledged to bolster its borders.
"We hope to start as soon as possible," said Eric Jacobstein, a Western Hemisphere official with the US State Department, at a press conference in Panama City.
Panama's new president, Jose Raul Mulino, took office on Monday vowing to curb unlawful immigration.
His government immediately signed an agreement with the United States to end passage through the dangerous Darien jungle linking Central America to Colombia, which has become a major route for the mostly US-bound migrants.
The US in turn agreed to cover the costs of deporting migrants from Panama.
A record 520,000 migrants crossed the Darien last year, many of them children and largely from Venezuela, Ecuador and Haiti. The number of migrant crossings there so far this year has edged up compared to 2023.