In Senegal’s capital, Nicaragua is a scorching ticket amongst journey brokers as migrants attempt to attain US


DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Gueva Ba tried to achieve Europe by boat 11 occasions from Morocco, failing every try. Then, in 2023, the previous welder heard a few new path to the USA by flying to Nicaragua and making the remainder of the journey illegally by land to Mexico’s northern border.

“In Senegal, it’s everywhere in the streets — everybody’s speaking about Nicaragua, Nicaragua, Nicaragua,” mentioned Ba, who paid about 6 million CFA francs ($10,000) to get to Nicaragua in July with stops in Morocco, Spain and El Salvador. “It’s not one thing hidden.”

Ba, 40, was deported from the U.S. with 131 compatriots in September after two months in detention, however hundreds of different Senegalese have gained a foothold in America. Many flip to savvy journey brokers who know the route — touted on social media by those that’ve efficiently settled within the U.S.

They’re a part of a surge in migration to the USA that’s extraordinary for its dimension and scope, with extra folks from far-flung nations accounting for crossings on the border. And as with this route utilized by the Senegalese, extra are determining plans, making funds, and looking for assist by way of social networks, and apps like WhatsApp and TikTok.

Arrests for unlawful crossings on the U.S. border with Mexico reached file highs in December. January noticed a drop for the month, however arrests have topped 6.4 million since January 2021. And Mexicans account for less than about 1 of 4 arrests, with the others coming from greater than 100 nations.

U.S. authorities arrested Senegalese migrants 20,231 occasions for crossing the border illegally from July to December. That is a 10-fold enhance from 2,049 arrests throughout the identical interval of 2022, based on U.S. Customs and Border Safety. Many cross in distant deserts of western Arizona, like Ba, and California.

Phrase of the Nicaragua route started spreading early final yr in Dakar and took maintain in Might, mentioned Abdoulaye Doucouré, who owns a journey company that bought about 1,200 tickets from Dakar to Nicaragua within the final three months of 2023, for the equal of a number of thousand {dollars} every.

“Individuals didn’t learn about this route, however with social networks and the primary migrants who took this route, the knowledge rapidly circulated amongst migrants,” he mentioned.

Some are motivated by Senegal’s political turmoil — authorities delayed February’s presidential elections by 10 months — however the sudden draw appeared to hinge largely on social media posts and the unfold of the route there.

Spikes attributed to social media have occurred in different West African nations, whose folks have traditionally turned first to Europe to flee. Mauritanians have arrived on the U.S. border with Mexico in equally massive numbers, and migrants from Ghana and Gambia have come, too.

Many are finally launched within the U.S. to pursue asylum in immigrant courts which are backlogged for years with greater than 3 million circumstances.

Passports from many African nations carry little weight within the Western Hemisphere, making the journey by land to the USA troublesome to even start. Senegalese can fly visa-free to solely two nations within the Americas: Nicaragua and Bolivia, based on The Henley Passport Index. Nicaragua is way nearer than Bolivia and avoids the notoriously harmful Darien Hole in Panama.

As U.S. sanctions in opposition to Nicaragua’s repressive authorities have elevated, the federal government of President Daniel Ortega has used migration to push again.

The Nicaraguan authorities went as far as to rent a Dubai-based agency to coach Nicaraguan civil aviation to handle nationwide immigration procedures for constitution flight passengers. Greater than 500 constitution flights landed from June to November, principally from Haiti and Cuba, based on Manuel Orozco, director of the migration, remittances and growth program on the Inter-American Dialogue.

However migrants from farther afield, like Ba, additionally made their technique to Nicaragua on a sequence of connecting business flights from Africa. In African capitals, migrants sometimes purchase multileg tickets from journey brokers connecting by way of Istanbul or Madrid, adopted by stops in Bogota, Columbia, or San Salvador, El Salvador, earlier than finally arriving in Managua, Nicaragua. From there, they meet smugglers providing to take them to the Honduran border, or organize the journey all the way in which to the U.S.

The U.S. State Division has referred to as on Nicaragua to “play a accountable function” in managing hemispheric migration, however that has but to be seen. Nicaraguan first woman and Vice President Rosario Murillo didn’t reply to a request for touch upon the surge in extra-continental migration by way of her nation.

In October, El Salvador started charging $1,130 for residents of 57 largely African nations and India transiting the nation’s airport. Authorities mentioned most of these charged had been on their technique to Nicaragua aboard Avianca, a Colombian business provider.

El Salvador’s price triggered airfares from Dakar to rise towards the top of 2023, mentioned Serigne Faye, an agent on the Touba Specific journey company in Senegal’s capital. Some passengers as an alternative fly by way of Bogota. Stopovers in Turkey are the most costly.

Whereas most asylum claims fail, the immigration court docket backlog implies that folks can stay within the U.S. for years, with eligibility for work permits. The asylum grant fee for Senegalese was 26% within the U.S. authorities’s price range yr ended Sept. 30, in contrast with 14% for all nationalities, based on Justice Division figures.

Ousmane Anne, 34, left Senegal on Sept. 25 with a aircraft ticket to Nicaragua, bought from a journey company. His journey took a month — longer and costlier than anticipated. Mexico was treacherous, he mentioned, describing his touring group as regularly harassed, threatened and robbed by gangs.

Regardless of the passion again house, he mentioned, he’d be hard-pressed to suggest the journey to anybody who would not perceive the dangers. However he made it to New York, which has the most important Senegalese inhabitants of any U.S. metropolitan space, based on census knowledge.

“I knew it will not be very simple to come back right here to the States, however the hope that I had was larger than all of the obstacles and issues,” Anne mentioned. “I knew the alternatives could be larger right here.”

He just lately attended a discussion board in Harlem, hosted by the Senegalese Affiliation of America. He discovered fundamentals of U.S. regulation, heard some do’s and don’ts from law enforcement officials concerning the e-bikes and mopeds which are fashionable with migrants, and received recommendations on navigating the well being care system.

Even when he got here away with extra questions than solutions, Anne mentioned, he stays hopeful.

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Related Press writers Philip Marcelo in New York, Elliot Spagat in San Diego, and Christopher Sherman and Maria Verza in Mexico Metropolis contributed.