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Over 200 Unidentified Migrant Bodies Found In The Darien -
(MENAFN- Newsroom Panama)
The Darien Gap, the treacherous stretch of the jungle linking Colombia and Panama, has once again exposed the brutal realities of mass migration: around 200 bodies of migrants who died while attempting to cross the jungle remain unidentified, many buried in makeshift cemeteries without names, their journeys cut short in one of the most dangerous migration corridors in the world.
According to Panama's Institute of Forensic Medicine, most of the bodies were recovered from rivers and jungle trails where migrants perished from exhaustion, drowning, animal attacks, or violent assaults.“We have approximately 220 human remains that have been buried or interred in cemeteries, we are talking about almost complete bodies,” said Jose Vicente Pachar, the director of the institute, in an interview. He added that the corpses were found“in a state of decomposition” and that he believes there are still“hundreds” of other bodies scattered across the vast jungle that will likely never be recovered.
The Darien has become an unavoidable passage for migrants traveling north toward the United States. In the past three years alone, more than 1 million people have crossed the rainforest in search of safety or economic opportunity. Yet the peril of the route is staggering wild rivers, venomous animals, tropical diseases, and the constant threat of criminal groups who rob and assault migrants. Despite the danger, the desperation driving migration has continued to grow.
Pachar admitted that the Panamanian state does not have the ability to conduct comprehensive search for remains.“We don't have either the capacity or the resources to go through the entire jungle in search of human remains because it's an enormous task,” he said. Most of the unidentified bodies have been interred in a cemetery built in 2023 in a Darien Village, financed by donation from the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Authorities have extracted DNA samples from the remains, and in the coming months a team of Argentine forensic experts is expected to arrive to help with identifications. Until then, most of the families waiting across the Americas and beyond remain in agonizing uncertainty, not knowing whether their loved ones survived the crossing.
According to Panama's Institute of Forensic Medicine, most of the bodies were recovered from rivers and jungle trails where migrants perished from exhaustion, drowning, animal attacks, or violent assaults.“We have approximately 220 human remains that have been buried or interred in cemeteries, we are talking about almost complete bodies,” said Jose Vicente Pachar, the director of the institute, in an interview. He added that the corpses were found“in a state of decomposition” and that he believes there are still“hundreds” of other bodies scattered across the vast jungle that will likely never be recovered.
The Darien has become an unavoidable passage for migrants traveling north toward the United States. In the past three years alone, more than 1 million people have crossed the rainforest in search of safety or economic opportunity. Yet the peril of the route is staggering wild rivers, venomous animals, tropical diseases, and the constant threat of criminal groups who rob and assault migrants. Despite the danger, the desperation driving migration has continued to grow.
Pachar admitted that the Panamanian state does not have the ability to conduct comprehensive search for remains.“We don't have either the capacity or the resources to go through the entire jungle in search of human remains because it's an enormous task,” he said. Most of the unidentified bodies have been interred in a cemetery built in 2023 in a Darien Village, financed by donation from the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Authorities have extracted DNA samples from the remains, and in the coming months a team of Argentine forensic experts is expected to arrive to help with identifications. Until then, most of the families waiting across the Americas and beyond remain in agonizing uncertainty, not knowing whether their loved ones survived the crossing.

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