Current:Home > reviewsPanamanian tribe to be relocated from coastal island due to climate change: "There's no other option" -WealthRoots Academy
Panamanian tribe to be relocated from coastal island due to climate change: "There's no other option"
PredictIQ View
Date:2025-04-08 05:54:19
For hundreds of years, the ocean has protected the Guna Yala culture on Cardi Sugdub, or Crab Island, located off the coast of Panama.
On the island, every square inch is occupied by about a thousand members of the Guna Yala tribe. There are no cars or motorcycles, people dress in traditional attire, and residents still speak their native tongue. Generations ago, members of the tribe settled on the island to escape aggression from Spanish colonizers and the Panamanian government.
But now, things are changing: Rising water levels are threatening the island and other nearby sites, forcing one of the largest migrations due to climate change in modern history.
Flooding on the low-lying islands has become more frequent due to the effects of sea level rise.
Magdalena Martinez, a resident of the island, told CBS News in Spanish that the flooding is a "sad reality" of life on the island. But in 30 years, scientists predict the islands will be completely underwater. Overpopulation is also an issue, but climate change is the biggest threat, said Laurel Avila, a member of Panama's Ministry of the Environment.
Avila explained that increased carbon emissions have raised the earth's temperature and caused glaciers to melt. This means water molecules expand, eventually leading to flooding like the kind seen on Crab Island. In the 1960s, the water around the islands rose at a rate of around 1 millimeter per year. Now, though, it's rising at about 3.5 millimeters a year, according to tide-gauge data from the Panama Canal Authority and satellite data from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
"(The tribe has) to be moved. There's no other option," Avila said. "The rise of the sea level is not going to stop."
It's a reality that the island's residents have only recently started to accept, after years of putting up a fight. Some members of the tribe see the move as a problem caused by the industrialized world unfairly bearing down on them and the culture they've defended.
Some residents, including Augusto Boyd, have put up a fight by using rocks and remnants of coral reefs to try to expand the island and keep the water at bay. However, he's realized it's a losing battle and the only option is to leave it all behind.
"Filling, filling, filling all the time, because the water doesn't stop. It keeps going up," he told CBS News in Spanish. "It's difficult. Everything you did here stays behind."
There is a place for the tribe to relocate to, but it's a stark, cookie-cutter subdivision with rows of houses that could not be more different than life on Cardi Sugdub. It's being built on land owned by the tribe, with the majority of the funding coming from the Panamanian government.
While life will be different on the mainland, Martinez says she knows the tribe's traditions will carry on.
"We carry that here, inside," she said.
- In:
- Panama
- Climate Change
- Environment
Manuel Bojorquez is a CBS News national correspondent based in Miami. He joined CBS News in 2012 as a Dallas-based correspondent and was promoted to national correspondent for the network's Miami bureau in January 2017. Bojorquez reports across all CBS News broadcasts and platforms.
Twitter InstagramveryGood! (6317)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Here's why Americans are so unhappy with the economy, in 3 charts
- Stock market today: World shares are mixed, while Tokyo’s benchmark extends its New Year rally
- Why Julia Roberts almost turned down 'Notting Hill': 'So uncomfortable'
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Tesla puts German factory production on hold as Red Sea attacks disrupt supply chains
- France’s youngest prime minister holds 1st Cabinet meeting with ambition to get ‘quick results’
- NCAA suspends Florida State assistant coach 3 games for NIL-related recruiting violation
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Violence rattles Ecuador as a nightclub arson kills 2 and a bomb scare sparks an evacuation
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- FCC chair asks automakers about plans to stop abusers from using car electronics to stalk partners
- Ex-manager for West Virginia disaster recovery group sentenced to more than 3 years for theft
- Watch these humpback whales create a stunning Fibonacci spiral to capture prey
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- US-led strikes on Yemeni rebels draw attention back to war raging in Arab world’s poorest nation
- A Denmark terror case has ‘links’ to Hamas, a prosecutor tells local media
- Rome opens new archaeological park and museum in shadow of Colosseum
Recommendation
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
Violence rattles Ecuador as a nightclub arson kills 2 and a bomb scare sparks an evacuation
St. Paul makes history with all-female city council, a rarity among large US cities
Abercrombie & Fitch’s Activewear Sale Is Fire with 30% off Everything, Plus an Extra 20% off
Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
Ohio woman who suffered miscarriage at home won't be charged with corpse abuse
Hunter Biden is expected to plead not guilty in a Los Angeles hearing on federal tax charges
A Danish appeals court upholds prison sentences for Iranian separatists convicted of terror charges