Echoes of the jungle: migrants’ journey through the Central American rainforest - European Commission
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European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations
  • 10 March 2025

Echoes of the jungle: migrants’ journey through the Central American rainforest

The Darien Gap, the only overland link between South and Central America, spans more than 60 miles of swamps, dense rainforest, rushing rivers, and rugged mountains. This extraordinary yet treacherous jungle is among the most dangerous migration routes in the world. 

Acclaimed photographer Federico Rios travelled through the Darien Gap in 2022 and 2023 alongside migrants, capturing raw moments of exhaustion and fear, as we all glimpse of hope and relief.

Below is a preview of his journey. The full photo exhibition, organised by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) with support from the European Union, launches at the Geopolis Photojournalism Center in Brussels on 11 March and remains open until 27 April.

A woman carrying her son on the back while walking on mud crossing the Darien Gap. The mud was deep and hard to walk, making the effort much bigger and the exhaustion more severe.
© Federico Rios

"The jungle is treacherous. We saw terrible things, many corpses along the way. We lost all our belongings and ran out of food. People slipped and fell, and some were raped, kidnapped, or robbed," says Jarelys, a Venezuelan mother of five who survived the crossing with her family, last October.

A group of migrants get stuck in a human traffic jam while climbing to the Banderas hill at the Darien Gap, near to the border between Colombia and Panama. Thousands of migrants have been crossing daily on these paths for the last few years.
© Federico Rios

The Darien is a remote, roadless area covering both Panamanian and Colombian territory, and the only possible overland crossing between South and Central America. The Darien jungle is as remarkable as it is inhospitable and it is one of the world’s most dangerous migration routes.

After several days of walking in the jungle, Jheymmi Bastidas, Hamlet Ortega’s wife, treated her stepdaughter Hamleisy’s injured foot while Hamleisy’s sisters Adriannys, left, and Hamleisky, right, looked on.
© Federico Rios

302,203 individuals crossed the Darien Gap irregularly in 2024, making it the second largest flow of people on record. Recent changes indicate the flow may be about to reverse, with continuous vulnerabilities and needs for people trying to return to their country of origin. Throughout Central America, the level of violence and insecurity remains very high,” says Nicolas Govaert, who heads the European Union’s Humanitarian Aid for Central America and Mexico.

A group of migrants gripping hand to hand, doing a human chain to protect themselves from being swallowed by the river while crossing the Darien Gap.
© Federico Rios

Local communities and people on the move are severely impacted, with many manifesting signs of severe trauma, and reporting abuses including robbery, extortion, kidnapping, rape, forced labour and child recruitment, affectations as frequent and severe as in countries at war,” Nicolas adds.

The family of Olga Ramos, daughters, grandsons and granddaughters, all migrants from Venezuela, while crossing the Darien Gap. They lost all their money on their journey.
© Federico Rios

People from all over the world have attempted to cross into Central America, hoping to escape conflict, poverty or persecution. They include an increasing number of unaccompanied and separated children, with 1,216 identified in the first quarter of 2024 - a surge of 124% over the previous year.

A group of Migrants from Haiti walks in the streets of Metetí, in Panama, the first indigenous town after crossing the Darien Gap.
© Federico Rios

What has impacted me the most is the hope and solidarity among migrants. When desperation pushed them to make the decision to migrate, it is hope that gives them the strength to take each step,” says photographer Federico Ríos, who spent days trekking the Darien Gap with migrants.

A group of migrants drinking the last sip of water from a bottle while crossing the Darien Gap. Migrants can't drink the water from the creeks and rivers, so they need to carry their own.
© Federico Rios

In 2024, the EU funded over €30 million of humanitarian aid in Central America and Mexico to support health services and protection projects for displaced people across the region, as well as to support families affected by violence in Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador.

Run by the Panamanian Red Cross, supported by the International Federation of the Red Cross and funded by the European Union, Humanitarian Service Points provide support and comfort to people on the move
© European Union