A Silent Crisis Unfolds in Panama
A desperate plea scrawled on paper, pressed against a hotel window: “Please help us.” Nearly 300 deportees, mostly from India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and China, are stranded in Panama. They were shipped out of the United States like cargo—discarded in a country that has no stake in their fate. Their crime? Chasing a better life. Their punishment? Indefinite limbo.
This is not just a bureaucratic hiccup. This is human desperation, political convenience, and international indifference playing out in real-time.
Why Panama? A Convenient “Holding Cell”
The US is facing logistical nightmares deporting people to certain countries. The solution? Offload them to Panama and call it a “stopover.” The Central American nation has conveniently stepped in as a “bridge”—not out of humanitarian goodwill, but as part of a transactional agreement. The US foots the bill; Panama holds the bodies.
Panama’s Security Minister, Frank Abrego, insists the deportees are “not being deprived of their freedom”—which is an interesting way to describe people being locked inside a guarded hotel. Yes, they have food. Yes, they have medical care. But what they don’t have is an answer to the most pressing question: Where do they go from here?
The Reality Inside the Decapolis Hotel
Images circulating online show detainees gripping window frames, their makeshift signs screaming for help. Meanwhile, outside, armed police stand watch. It doesn’t take a human rights expert to see what’s wrong here.
Some of these migrants left their home countries under dire circumstances—fleeing violence, persecution, or economic collapse. The US, having deemed them unworthy of its soil, has now placed them in bureaucratic purgatory. If they refuse to return to their home countries, they are being transferred to a shelter in the Darien jungle, an area notorious for being one of the most treacherous migration routes in the world.
It is a decision that seems less about migration policy and more about deterrence through suffering.
The US-Panama Deal: A Political Bargain
The groundwork for this arrangement was laid earlier this month when US Secretary of State Marco Rubio visited Panama. As part of the agreement, Washington covers the cost of housing and processing these deportees while Panama plays host to a problem it never asked for.
If a deportee agrees to go back to their home country, they are put on a flight. If they refuse, their future is an open-ended question—one that could involve languishing in makeshift camps or attempting dangerous journeys to another land.
The irony? Some of these individuals might still end up at the US border again, after surviving an odyssey far worse than the one that got them deported in the first place.
Backlash and Human Rights Concerns
In India, outrage is brewing. Since February 5, the US has forcibly returned at least 332 Indians on three separate deportation flights, all landing in Amritsar. Reports of detainees being shackled and handcuffed throughout their flights have only fueled the public anger.
One can’t help but ask: What is being accomplished here? Is this about enforcing immigration laws or making an example out of those who dared to dream? The line between security and cruelty is blurring.
What Happens Next?
The situation is fluid, but one thing is clear: Panama, much like these migrants, is caught in the middle. The US gets to deport people without dealing with the immediate fallout, while the deportees themselves are left in legal, emotional, and physical limbo.
As world leaders pontificate about human rights, democracy, and dignity, a group of men and women sit in a Panamanian hotel, staring out of windows, waiting for someone to care.
The question is: Will anyone listen?