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Central America

The Acajutla-San Salvador stretch is the most relevant for the Pacific Railway

Dante Mossi, president of the Central American Bank for Economic Integration (CABEI), said that according to a strategic study developed by the institution, they identified the stretch between San Salvador and the Acajutla port as the most relevant for the Pacific Railway project.

The Pacific Railway is one of President Bukele’s administration’s main bets on infrastructure. According to the Pacific Plan, this project seeks to link the Acajutla port and La Union port by train.

On this matter, Federico Anliker, president of CEPA, recently said in an interview that the project is on hold, but that it has not been ruled out. He also stressed that it would bring economic growth to the country.

CABEI’s president added that they were discussing with President Bukele’s government the design of the Pacific Railway’s feasibility study. The pandemic has forced the experts to work remotely, but Mossi hopes that when the airport opens, these studies will advance.

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Central America

UN experts concerned over human rights impact of Nicaragua’s new constitutional changes

A group of UN experts warned on Monday about the “devastating consequences” for human rights following the approval of a constitutional reform in Nicaragua that grants absolute power to President Daniel Ortega and his wife Rosario Murillo.

The UN Human Rights Experts on Nicaragua expressed in a statement their “deep concern” over the “devastating and far-reaching consequences” of the constitutional change for the fundamental rights of the Nicaraguan people.

The reform, approved on Friday by a fully pro-government parliament, grants “unlimited power” to Ortega and Murillo, elevating the vice presidency to “co-presidency.”

According to the initiative presented by Ortega, both co-presidents will coordinate the legislative, judicial, electoral bodies, and local governments.

“The reform seems to aim at formalizing the de facto dissolution of the separation, independence, cooperative balance, and mutual control between the different branches of government,” the experts noted.

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The group, an independent body with a mandate from the UN Human Rights Council, also added that journalism is “practically eradicated” in the Central American country, especially now that the Constitution’s prohibition on censoring the media has been eliminated.

The reform establishes that the state will “monitor” the press and the Church to prevent them from serving “foreign interests.”

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Central America

Mulino warns Trump: Darién is U.S.’s ‘other border’ in call for bilateral solutions to migration

Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino reiterated on Thursday that the Darién region is “the other border” of the United States and that President-elect Donald Trump must understand this, given his announcement to toughen U.S. immigration policy.

“And I repeat what I have said: he (Trump) must know that his other border, the U.S. border, is in Darién, and we need to begin solving this issue bilaterally or together with a group of countries that contribute people to the migratory flow,” Mulino stated during his weekly press conference.

The Panamanian leader added that the United States “needs to be more aware that this (the flow of irregular migrants through Darién) is their problem. These people are not coming to stay in Panama… they want to go to the United States for whatever reasons they may have.”

In 2023, more than 520,000 irregular migrants crossed the Darién jungle into Panama, a historic figure. This year, the flow has decreased, with more than 281,000 travelers making the journey by October 31, mostly Venezuelans (over 196,000), according to Panama’s National Migration Service.

“Panama is doing what it can,” Mulino said, emphasizing the country’s significant financial investment in security, medical care, and food for migrants. However, he noted, “As long as the crisis in Venezuela persists, all signs point to this continuing, with the human drama that it involves.”

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He emphasized that Venezuelans make up the majority of those crossing the jungle, with 69% according to Panamanian statistics, followed by Colombians (6%), Ecuadorians (5%), Chinese (4%), and Haitians (4%). The rest come from over fifty countries worldwide.

On July 1, when Mulino began his five-year term, Panama and the United States signed an agreement under which the U.S. government covers the costs of repatriating migrants who entered through Darién. Under this program, which is funded with $6 million, more than 1,000 people have already been deported, mostly Colombians.

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Central America

Ten dead in Panama due to storms causing over $100 million in damages

Ten people have died in Panama due to storms that have caused over $100 million in damages from flooding and infrastructure collapse in the last ten days, President José Raúl Mulino reported on Thursday.

The most affected areas are the western provinces of Chiriquí, which borders Costa Rica, Veraguas, and the indigenous Ngäbe Buglé comarca, due to heavy rains that have been falling for more than ten days.

During his weekly press conference, Mulino initially stated that the storm had caused five deaths, but this was immediately corrected by the director of the National Civil Protection Service (Sinaproc), Omar Smith, who confirmed that the number of deaths had risen to ten.

“What worries me are the human lives, I think we had five (deaths), how many? Ten already? Imagine that,” Mulino said.

Last year, Panama experienced a drought that led to reduced traffic through the interoceanic canal, which operates on fresh water, but the situation began to normalize this year with the onset of the rainy season, which has been abundant since May.

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The president announced that the government will declare a state of emergency for the affected areas, where rivers have overflowed, homes have been damaged, landslides have occurred, roads have collapsed, and crops have been lost.

“Based on the reports I’ve received, the damage is significant,” Mulino noted.

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