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"For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 15 Feb 2025, 14:17

Smuggler reveals migration routes to US for Indian migrants

Since 2022, more than 100,000 Indians have arrived in the US.

The small Indian village of Gholpura, four hours north of New Delhi, feels very distant from the U.S. Yet, the influence of a country more than 8,000 miles away is undeniable.

Gholpura has lost its sense of community: there are no children playing in the streets, and only a few homes remain occupied by those who have not migrated.



"Our community is going abroad not because they must, but they are compelled to do so," one Indian villager told ABC News.

ABC News spoke with a man who wished to remain anonymous due to his intention to enter the U.S. He met with a smuggler who would assist him in coming to the U.S. illegally at a local billiards hall.

"I have been doing this job for the last 10 years," the smuggler told ABC News. "In the total count of people that I have sent, nearly 250 people went to America."


A smuggler, hiding his identity, speaks with ABC News.

He is part of a sprawling international network. For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 in total, the smuggler sends migrants on what he refers to as the "Donkey Route." This term is a play on the Punjabi idiom "Dunki," which means to hop from place to place.

From the quiet fields of rural India to the deserts of northern Mexico runs an international migration superhighway, funneling tens of thousands of Indians to the U.S. border each year. Since 2022, more than 100,000 Indians have arrived in the U.S., making it the country with the most migrants from a non-Latin American nation. All of this is facilitated by transnational organized crime.

In various parts of northern India, there are countless advertisements for immigration services and English-language learning, targeting numerous villagers eager to migrate. While some of these opportunities are legal, a significant portion is not.

Human smugglers are rampant in this part of the world, meeting the demands of thousands of would-be migrants each year.



Chinese migration is seen at the U.S. southern border.


"They go from here to Delhi," the smuggler said. "Then to Dubai from Delhi. Then, from Dubai, we get visas issued for different countries like Guatemala, Panama, Costa Rica, and Cancun. There are a lot of border guards, who openly take money. They will keep taking money and it becomes a chain."

All roads lead to Mexico, where Indians join others, a veritable United Nations of migrants, often abused and treated poorly by the cartels who see them simply as a commodity.

For those willing to pay a bit more, they get separated from the rest and sent to individual cartel safe houses.

Emigration from India, particularly from northern states affected by political and sectarian violence and high unemployment, has surged recently. This trend has made Indians some of the cartel smuggler's best customers.

President Donald Trump has targeted this type of smuggling by deploying the military to the border in an effort to reduce it.

Back in India, the migrant from the billiards hall told ABC News he hoped to reach the U.S. before Trump took office. It is not known if he succeeded, as he stopped responding to messages right after he left. However, where he goes, others are likely to follow.

"So, to date, I have around 700 passports who want to go abroad," the smuggler said. "They only want to go to America. America is a craze. And they only want to go to America at any cost. No matter what the cost is. At the end, a person has only one thing, life."

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 15 Feb 2025, 14:59

Second US military flight carrying 116 illegal immigrants lands in Amritsar

Of the 199 people deported, 67 hail from Punjab, 33 from Haryana, eight from Gujarat, three from Uttar Pradesh, two each from Goa, Maharashtra and Rajasthan and one each from Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir.



US military aircraft lands in India carrying illegal immigrants


A US military aircraft carrying 116 illegal Indian immigrants landed in India’s Amritsar Saturday evening (February 15).

This is the second batch of Indians deported under the Donald Trump administration, which comes two days after the visit of PM Narendra Modi to the White House and his meeting with the US president.

Among the deportees, 65 are from Punjab, 33 from Haryana, eight from Gujarat, two each from Uttar Pradesh, Goa, Maharashtra and Rajasthan, and one each from Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir. Most of the deportees are in the age group of 18 to 30.

A third US flight carrying Indian immigrants is expected to land in Amritsar on Sunday.

Earlier, the Indian government had said it has identified and confirmed 487 illegal Indian nationals living in the US who would be flown back to their homeland.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 15 Feb 2025, 15:29

Indians have come to make up the third-largest group of undocumented immigrants in the United States, according to the Pew Research Center’s 2021 estimates, which put the number of such Indians at 725,000. India is the only country in the top five outside Latin America, and since 2011, the number of undocumented Indians in the United States has grown by 70 percent, the fastest growth of all nationalities. Figures from U.S. Customs and Border Protection show that the number of undocumented Indian immigrants increased the fastest between 2020 and 2023.

The immigrants are often from middle-class families. They frequently sell their land to pay for the journey — which families say can run $40,000 to $100,000 per person — hoping that working in America will triple their wages, produce a secure future for their children and yield a higher value in the marriage market for their sons.

These migrants are “not the desperately poor” and often come from the most prosperous states in India, said Devesh Kapur, a South Asian studies professor at Johns Hopkins University who focuses on the Indian diaspora. But faced with a shortage of attractive jobs and a struggling agricultural sector, they find that the wealth they have in India is not enough to transform their lives, and this creates “a culture of migration,” he said.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 15 Feb 2025, 16:42

US deports 2nd batch of 117 illegal Indian immigrants


Relatives of the deportees wait outside the airport in Amritsar on Saturday

A second military flight carrying Indian citizens deported by the US for illegally entering the country landed in Amritsar late on Saturday, bringing 117 people – most of whom were from Punjab.

The United States Air Force C-17 Globemaster jet landed at the airport around 11.30pm and on-board were 65 from Punjab, 33 from Haryana, eight from Gujarat, three from Uttar Pradesh, two each from Maharashtra and Rajasthan, and Goa and one each from Himachal Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir, people aware of the matter said.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 15 Feb 2025, 17:34

Modi Is Placating Trump on Illegal Migration, Despite Opposition at Home

While India accepts shackled US deportees, cracking down on the booming ‘donkey route’ between the countries will be an uphill struggle




On a cold night in 2022, 24-year-old Ashish Solanki (his name has been changed at his request) clicked away at the cash register of a 7-Eleven in SeaTac, a small city on the edge of Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. He had a set routine during his 11-hour shift at the convenience store. He scanned items one by one, waiting for a green light and a beep, followed by the tap of a credit card. After an approval message, he put the items into a paper bag to complete the transaction. If the card didn’t work, he used his patchy English. “Card not working, sir,” he would say, clearing at least 30 transactions each night.

He was 7,000 miles from his hometown of Jind, Haryana, where the nearest international airport is Delhi. A nonstop flight to Seattle takes 18 hours. But for Solanki, the journey to the United States had taken 74 days. “I jumped onto the other side of the border on Aug. 30, 2022, between 11 p.m. and 1 a.m.,” he said, recalling how he had illegally entered the U.S. using a route that Indian travel agents call the “donkey route” (or “dunki” in the local accent).

The “donkey route” includes a combination of air, land and sea segments to reach the U.S. land border, cross it and then eventually file for asylum. It involves transit across Europe, West Africa and South America, and these journeys are planned and sold by Indian travel agents just like any other 10-day travel packages. But in this case, there is no return ticket, nor is asylum guaranteed.

A typical package includes tickets to different destinations and pickup and drop-off by local middlemen called “donkers,” who are also responsible for getting the migrants across various borders before they reach Mexico. Additionally, they provide training on how to surrender to the Border Patrol, what to expect in the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center and how to claim asylum during the “Credible Fear Interview” with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

The “donkey route” typically costs around $40,000 to $50,000 per person, and those who undertake these journeys spend years in the U.S. living as undocumented workers waiting for employment authorization and asylum hearings.

The “premium” package, which shrinks the 84-day journey and directly delivers the migrant to Mexico in a few days, costs an additional $20,000. Travel agents advertise this as a “no loss,” “no jungle” donkey route. It gets the migrants a Schengen visa and a stay at a boutique hotel until they reach Mexico.

People on the “donkey route” are often unaware of the realities of the journey and of life as an undocumented immigrant in the United States. Once on this trip, most migrants don’t have access to the main “donker” from India from whom they bought the travel package, and by that point they are at the mercy of the middlemen, who only announce each day’s agenda the morning of that day. Whenever there are hiccups en route or long wait times, they spend days, sometimes weeks, contained in “boarding houses” so as not to be caught by the local police.

After paying $40,000 — a large chunk of his family’s savings — to his travel agent, Solanki’s journey began with a flight to Ethiopia. From there he flew to Brazil, followed by Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and Panama.

From Panama, the most dangerous part of the journey began. It involved crossing the Darien Gap, the only section of the Pan-American Highway that was never built. A slender slice of land between Panama and Colombia, it measures 66 miles. But since it is an unpaved terrain of surging rivers, muddy slopes and rock-strewn mountains, it has to be covered by foot, exposing people who take the risk to injury, disease or death. It took Solanki three days to traverse this jungle.

Out of the Darien, tired, desperate and sick, he underwent another journey of seven days on foot to Mexico City, where he was cooped up in a boarding house for 20 days until he was taken to a spot close to Yuma, Arizona. There, he crossed the U.S.-Mexico border and voluntarily surrendered to the U.S. Border Patrol.

At the ICE detention center, a “donker” filed for a release bond and paid $3,000 to the Department of Homeland Security on behalf of Solanki, who then moved to Seattle, where he found the job at the 7-Eleven through his travel agent’s network.

He filed for asylum on his own, without the assistance of any lawyer, with the claim of persecution due to “race.” Currently, he is a trucker based in California.

From 2020 until 2024, there has been at least a 50% increase year on year in the number of illegal Indian immigrants at U.S. borders, including those who were expelled before they could seek asylum, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data.

The issue of migration — and the recent humiliating deportation of undocumented Indian nationals in shackles — will be at play this week as the Indian prime minister is expected to make his first visit (during Trump’s second term) to Washington.

In fiscal year 2020, there were 19,883 Indians identified at the northern, southern and coastal U.S. borders, followed by 30,662 in 2021. (In the U.S., a fiscal year begins on Oct. 1 and ends on Sept. 30 of the next year.)

In 2022, this number doubled to 63,927. The number of Indian immigrants who crossed the borders into the U.S. peaked in 2023, with 96,917, before dropping to 90,415 in 2024.

In just the first three months of the 2025 fiscal year, which started in October 2024, 18,625 Indians had crossed the U.S. borders — close to the number of Indians who had crossed the borders in the entire fiscal year of 2020.

Research by the Pew Research Center has suggested that more than 725,000 undocumented Indians were living in the country as of 2022, making them the third-largest group behind Mexicans and Salvadorans.

While deportations to India took place under the Biden administration, illegal immigration from the country came under the spotlight after Trump assumed office. It was recently reported that the Indian government would take back 18,000 Indians living in the U.S. without proper documentation.

The Indian government did not confirm the number of people who would return, but they said they were against illegal immigration and were ready to accept the deported Indians after verification. It did not object to the U.S. deporting its citizens.

“As part of India-U.S. cooperation on migration and mobility, both sides are engaged in a process to deter illegal migration. This is being done to create more avenues for legal migration from India to the U.S.,” said Randhir Jaiswal, a spokesperson for India’s Ministry of External Affairs, in a statement. Political observers said the move was to placate Trump, whom Modi called a “dear friend” while congratulating him on X after the inauguration.

Over the last two decades, U.S.-India relations have evolved into a strong strategic partnership. Alongside growing defense, trade and technology cooperation, they also share concerns over regional security, especially when it comes to China. Modi and Trump could be seen sharing bear hugs during the latter’s first term, while both leaders hosted grand events at stadiums for each other in their respective countries.

But since Trump’s return, he has threatened action against both allies and adversaries regarding trade imbalances and illegal immigration as part of his “American First” policy. This appears to have encouraged the Modi-led government to issue prompt promises to comply and cooperate with the Trump administration’s deportation sweeps.

Earlier this month, when a U.S. military transport aircraft carrying 104 deported Indian immigrants landed in Amritsar, a city in the northwestern state of Punjab, India did not protest or complain. It included 19 women and 13 minors, among them a 4-year-old boy and two girls aged 5 and 7.

It was not the first time Indians had been deported from the U.S. Jaiswal said that more than 1,000 people had been brought back over the past year and External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar told the Indian Parliament that a total of 15,668 illegal Indian immigrants had been deported since 2009.

However, it was the first time a deportation had received significant media coverage in the country. Visuals of Indian citizens, who had spent the 40-hour flight home with shackles on their wrists and ankles, circulated on TV news and social media. U.S. Border Patrol Chief Michael W. Banks was one of the first people to share a video on X.

Later, deportees told journalists that they requested the military officials to “take [the shackles] off to eat or go to the bathroom,” but instead they were treated “horribly” and “without any regard.” “The way they looked at us, I’ll never forget it,” one of them said.

The scenes led to an uproar in the country, led by the opposition parties, which demonstrated outside Parliament, some wearing shackles and others mocking the much-touted friendship between Trump and Modi. The youth wing of the Indian National Congress burned an effigy of Trump during a protest in Delhi.

Responding to the outrage, Jaishankar defended the U.S. government policies to the Indian Parliament. He said that the “use of restraints” during deportation flights was carried out according to U.S. standard operating procedures in place since 2012 and added that New Delhi was engaging with Washington to ensure that deportees were not mistreated.

Jaiswal also mentioned that India has been cooperating with the U.S. to “create more avenues for legal migration” to the country.

Indians have been the greatest beneficiaries of the H1-B visa program, which allows for temporary employment of highly skilled foreign workers in particular occupations in the U.S. Studying for a postgraduate degree in the U.S. and getting picked for the visa via a finance or tech job has long been a common aspiration, and since 2015, over 70% of approved H-1B visas have gone to Indians.

Moreover, with a huge Indian diaspora residing in the U.S. — totaling a little over 5 million people — tourist visas to the country are also in high demand from family and friends of these residents. Since the pandemic, wait times for visa appointments at U.S. embassies and consulates in India have exceeded 400 days.

Apart from this hurdle, the Modi-led government’s stance on illegal immigration is not too different from Trump’s. Immigration is also a politically charged issue in India, especially in eastern states like Assam and West Bengal, which share a porous border with Bangladesh.

Politicians from right-wing parties, such as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), have used the issue to rally their base, often targeting Bangladeshis and Rohingyas in their speeches and calling them a threat to national security. The country’s largest detention center was built in Assam in 2019, and India has been looking to deport illegal immigrants from its own territory.

Furthermore, in a bid to boost American exports to India and avoid a trade war, the Indian government announced that it was slashing import duties on heavyweight American bikes like the iconic Harley Davidson, along with other cuts for technology, automobiles and industrial and waste imports, in its recent budget presented on Feb. 1.

In his first term, Trump criticized India’s steep tariffs, which included a 100% duty on Harleys, calling them unfair trade practices. After his recent electoral win, he also threatened the BRICS group of countries — of which India is a founding member — with steep tariffs if it sought to replace the dollar as a reserve currency. Recently, the White House said Trump held a “productive call” with Modi, pressing him to buy more U.S. arms and work toward a fairer trade balance between the countries.

Back home in India, families are taking stock of the new realities. They spend their life savings to provide the tens of thousands of dollars required to take the “donkey route” and meet the legal fees for seeking asylum in the U.S.

“They are selling their lands; they are selling their homes,” said Anju Agnihotri Chaba, a Punjab-based senior journalist with The Indian Express, one of the top national dailies in the country.

Families consider it an investment. “It is deep-rooted in the mindset that earning in dollars rather than rupees is going to be the source of prosperity,” she said.

Illegal migration to the U.S. predominantly comes from three states in India — Punjab and Haryana in the north and Gujarat in the west. Both Punjabi and Gujarati communities have historically been migrating to the U.S. for decades.

So when an unemployment crisis stifles young people’s hopes and they see no future at home, they are motivated to take the risk. Moreover, pop culture and real-life testimonies of people who have successfully migrated also influence them.

“Donkey” vloggers, who emerged on social media in the last few years, have fueled this migration trend. They share every step of their journey until they surrender their phone to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers.

When they reappear online after a month-long sabbatical, it is often with a video titled “Buying iPhone 14 in USA #Donkey #India,” which serves as the perfect payoff for them and the viewers alike. Viewers flood the comment section of these videos requesting the contact details of travel agents, which are then shared by the migrants.

Solanki, too, was a star “donkey” YouTuber, with 40,000 subscribers, and made several videos tracking his journey, which racked up over 135,000 views.

Seeing the migrants achieve their goals despite hardships creates a ripple effect of copycat migrants and donkey vloggers. However, these accounts often omit the real dangers: the risks of being caught and imprisoned, the financial costs and the possibility of death.

Now, as deportees return and share their stories, they allege that they were assured by their agents that they would reach the U.S. legally in two weeks and blame them for providing misleading information about the journey.

Having lost their life savings, these deportees now face a future with lifelong debt, while also dealing with intense shame — though there are also those who have been flaunting it as a badge of honor. As the police are reaching out to families and deported people to track down the travel agents, they find that some have moved to undisclosed places.

In an earlier conversation, Chaba said this trend won’t stop until the business of the “donkers” or travel agents is properly dealt with. She said that they get arrested in India but explained that it is easy to get bail, and that the cycle needed to be broken by ensuring convictions.

Until recently, it was only when migrants who had embarked on these journeys got stuck or went missing that their families in India approached police stations to file complaints against the travel agents. But now, in a bid to crack down on illegal immigration, police forces in states like Punjab and Haryana have been asked to create special investigation teams to find and book the agents. The government has said it is working to bring in new immigration laws for safe, orderly and legal migration for employment abroad.

If Trump's intention was to send a message to Indians, it remains to be seen how the deportation planes might reshape migration trends between the countries.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 15 Feb 2025, 21:32

Trump's immigration crackdown: Another US plane carrying 116 deportees lands in Amritsar





A US plane carrying 116 illegal Indian immigrants landed at the Amritsar International Airport late Saturday night, official sources said.

A C-17 aircraft landed at the airport around 11.35 pm as against the expected time of 10 pm, sources said. This is the second batch of such Indians to be deported by the Donald Trump administration as part of its crackdown on illegal immigrants.

It was not immediately clear whether the deportees were in shackles, like the previous batch was.

The deportees will be allowed to head to their homes after completion of formalities including immigration, verification, and background checks.

Many from the first batch of illegal immigrants landed here on February 5, most of them, from Punjab, said they wanted to migrate to the US for a better life for their families, but were duped by their agents. Their dreams were shattered when they were caught on the US border and sent back in shackles.

Earlier, there were reports that the plane would carry 119 immigrants, but as per an updated list of passengers, the number of deportees in the second batch was 116, sources said.

Of the fresh batch of deportees, 65 are from Punjab, 33 from Haryana, eight from Gujarat, two each from Uttar Pradesh, Goa, Maharashtra and Rajasthan, and one each from Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir. Most of them are aged 18 to 30, as per the sources.

The families of some of the deportees reached the airport to receive them.

A third plane carrying 157 deportees is expected to land on February 16, sources said.

On February 5, a US military aircraft carrying 104 illegal Indian immigrants landed at the Amritsar airport. Of them, 33 each were from Haryana and Gujarat, and 30 were from Punjab.

The family members of the second batch of illegal Indian immigrants deported seemed in a state of shock, with many of them saying that they raised money by pledging farm land and cattle to send them abroad for a bright future.

A family member of Daljit Singh, a native of Kurala Kalan village in the Tanda area of Hoshiarpur district, said a travel agent duped him.

Kamalpreet Kaur, the wife of Daljit, alleged that her husband had been deceived by the travel agent who promised him a direct flight to the US but instead, took him via the "donkey route" -- an illegal and risky pathway used by migrants to enter the US.

Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann attacked the Centre, as he did earlier, over the landing of US planes carrying the immigrants at Amritsar airport. "Do not make our holy city a deport centre," he said.

Amritsar is known for the Golden Temple, the Durgiana Mandir, the Ram Tirath temple, Jallianwala Bagh and the Gobindgarh Fort, he said.

The CM visited the international airport in Amritsar and said his government has made arrangements to take the Punjab residents from among the second batch of deportees to their home towns.

He said his administration has also offered to take the deportees from Haryana to their destinations.

However, the Haryana government has already made similar arrangements.

The deportees from the other states will travel to Delhi from Amritsar on a plane on Sunday morning, Mann said, adding, food arrangement has been made for them.

Mann said there are many airbases in the country and planes carrying immigrants can land at any one of those.

"Will they (the authorities) allow the landing (of a plane carrying immigrants) in Vatican City, if they (immigrants) hail from there?" he asked.

Replying to a question on BJP leader R P Singh's post on X that Amritsar is the closest international airport for planes entering India from the US, Mann wondered that in that case, why the Centre has not started flight services to the US from the city, which has been the demand of the state government.

BJP general secretary Tarun Chugh accused Mann of "doing politics" over deportees.

Congress leader Partap Singh Bajwa said the AAP government in Punjab "failed" to curb human trafficking and asked Mann how many travel agents were booked for human trafficking in the last three years.

A four-member Special Investigation Team, headed by Additional Director General of Police, NRI Affairs, Praveen Sinha, was recently formed by Punjab Director General of Police Gaurav Yadav to probe complaints regarding the involvement of fraudulent travel agents in deceptive immigration practices.

The DGP on Saturday requested the public to come forward with any information about these rackets.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 16 Feb 2025, 00:52

'Deported From USA': New Status Symbol in Punjab as Illegal Immigrants Return to India

A recent viral video reveals that being deported from the United States has become the latest status symbol in Punjab.



'Deported From USA': New Status Symbol in Punjab as Illegal Immigrants Return to India

Viral News: As the second batch of deported Indians from the US arrived in Amritsar on Saturday, a recent video reveals that being deported from the United States has become the latest status symbol in Punjab.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 16 Feb 2025, 02:54

Brazen Canadian ‘coyotes’ smuggling migrants across the northern border — even advertising on TikTok

Smugglers are brazenly using TikTok to advertise their human-trafficking services across the Canada-US border — undercutting the Great White North’s position as it tries to hammer out a critical deal with the US on tariffs and security, The Post has learned.

For close to a year, the Canadian “coyotes” — who largely target Indian nationals — promise a hassle-free trip to the States for as much as $5,000, with new border-crossing accounts popping up every time others are removed from the platform.

The posts often feature a US flag waving over a wooded northern border, set to Indian music, urging wannabe border crossers to DM them for more details.

“Payment after reach,” reads one post, while another assures “100% safe.”


Smugglers post photos like this one on their TikTok accounts showing groups of migrants after they’ve crossed the border into the US. TikTok @helper4731

The competition can be cutthroat — “$4,000 cheapest in market,” one post reads.

Northern crossings have fallen from an average of around 4,500 Indian nationals nabbed each month before President Trump took office, to 2,900 since, according to US Customs and Border Protection data — but the Post has identified at least half a dozen of these coyote accounts still operating on TikTok.

The Post contacted one smuggler, who said it would cost $4,500 for one person to get to cross into the Empire State from Montreal.


Many of the TikTok posts brag about how safe and easy the illegal journey through the woods was.

“When you ready to go, send me your ID,” he said.

The trips leave from either Montreal; Brampton, outside Toronto; and Surrey, outside Vancouver. They deliver migrants to upstate New York or Washington state, according to the TikTok accounts the Post has reviewed.

To New York, the journey includes a two-hour car ride, and a 25-minute walk through the woods, where the migrants are given a map to guide them across the border outside official checkpoints.

Up to five migrants are taken at a time for a “group walk,” the coyote told The Post.


The smugglers often advertise their low prices in the TikTok posts. TikTok @usa_jagga09

And like legitimate business, the accounts often feature testimonials, in Punjabi, from “satisfied customers,” bragging about how “easy” and even “comfortable” the journey was.

“The service was outstanding, we have come through very easily,” gushed one.


A smuggler promises migrants will get to the US the same day, and only pay after they’ve made it through the border.


For smugglers, the Canada-US border has long been viewed as an easy hustle.

Last year, The Post spoke to residents living alongside the border who testified to how often they see illegal crossings.

It’s the longest land border in the world, and unlike the US-Mexico border, it’s largely unguarded outside of official crossing points, since much of it is wilderness.

“They call it a border, but you can cross anytime you want,” said political scientist Shinder Purewal from Kwantlen Polytechnic University in British Columbia, Canada.

“It’s really an undefended border. Nobody is on basically either side.”



A border sign at the Roxham Road border crossing between the US and Canada in Champlain, New York, shows how easily one can sometimes cross the border on foot. AFP via Getty Images


For smugglers, Indian nationals make up a niche market, but a thriving one.

In 2024, Indians made up almost a quarter of those apprehended crossing the United States’ northern border illegally — by far the largest group, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data.

Each day, more than 100 Indian nationals, on average, are caught by agents at the Canada-US border. The number has tripled in the last two years, according to the data.

Most often, they enter Canada on student visas. Last year, the country’s department of immigration estimated 50,000 students were let in but never showed up to school. Twenty thousand of them were from India.

“This type of behavior is indicative of the culture of incompetence and just how brazen drug trafficking and human smuggling had become under the previous administration,” said Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R-NJ).

For smugglers, Indian nationals make up a niche market, but a thriving one.

In 2024, Indians made up almost a quarter of those apprehended crossing the United States’ northern border illegally — by far the largest group, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data.

Each day, more than 100 Indian nationals, on average, are caught by agents at the Canada-US border. The number has tripled in the last two years, according to the data.

Most often, they enter Canada on student visas. Last year, the country’s department of immigration estimated 50,000 students were let in but never showed up to school. Twenty thousand of them were from India.

“This type of behavior is indicative of the culture of incompetence and just how brazen drug trafficking and human smuggling had become under the previous administration,” said Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R-NJ).



Migrants crossing the Canada-US border illegally walk through the woods for about 30 minutes to complete the journey.


Trump threatened earlier this month to impose a 25% tariff on Canadian exports to the US, saying it was not doing enough to police its side of the border.

The US agreed to stall the tariffs for 30 days, after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised to push ahead with a $1.3 billion border security plan that includes 10,000 people to patrol the border and 24/7 surveillance with the use of drones and helicopters.

Crossings at the southern border have virtually slowed to a halt since Trump took office. So far in February, about 359 illegal migrants per day have been caught across the entire southern border — down more than 90% from the same month last year, according to leaked Customs and Border Protection data.

But some are skeptical the untamed north will be as easy to secure.

“Nothing will change,” said Purewal.

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY) called for a federal probe after being told of the hustle by The Post.


Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officers patrol a wooded area on the Canada-US border near New York state on Jan. 9, 2025. REUTERS


n ports of entry is illegal and very dangerous,” said spokeswoman Mary-Liz Power.

Added Border Patrol spokesman Steven Bansbach: “All US border patrol resources will be used to prevent the illegal entry of people and contraband into the United States.”

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the White House did not comment.

ethiopianunity
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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by ethiopianunity » 16 Feb 2025, 05:57

If you see Indians in control of institutions in West and colonized nation, run! Run fast! Why? British Empire was built because of the subservient India and they were used throughout British colonization nations for further control and they have been brought to West. They are staunch loyal to colonizers and domination of West. I see Indians popping in top leadership in USA. Is sign of danger to many non West or non Whites especially to those whom U.S considers enemy or suspicious.

Examples also Kenya, institutions in England esp at customs, targeting non white are Indians who harass them, all Caribbean nations

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 16 Feb 2025, 09:00

More than 700,000 illegal immigrants, 70% of H1-B visa holders and they want country based green card allocations. Truth is stranger than fiction!



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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 16 Feb 2025, 15:23

Third batch of illegal Indian immigrants from US land in Amritsar



Indian immigrants who were deported from US leave the Sri Guru Ram Dass Jee International Airport, in Amritsar on Sunday.


A US aircraft carrying the third batch of illegal Indian immigrants landed in Amritsar, Punjab, on Sunday, (February 16). There were reportedly 112 Indians onboard the third flight.

“The plane landed at the airport at 10:03 pm,” sources told news agency PTI. “Of the 112 deportees, 44 are from Haryana, 33 from Gujarat, 31 from Punjab, two from Uttar Pradesh and one each from Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh,” they added.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 16 Feb 2025, 17:29

Punjab Youth Congress hold massive protest in Amritsar against inhuman treatment to youth deported from USA





MRITSAR: Punjab Youth Congress (PYC) on the directive of IYC president Uday Bhanu Chib today held a massive protest and dharna at Hall Gate here against the inhuman treatment given to Youth hailing from Punjab and other states, deported from USA in army transport aeroplanes.

Mohit Mohindra President of PYC who led the protest said that it was shocking that deported youth was shackled and handcuffed and it is more distressing that Indian Government had failed to lodge formal protest with US government for ill-treatment of the Youth. "It is unfortunate Prime Minister Narender Modi who was in USA to meet president Donald Trump had no guts to take up the issue with the latter. He questioned the purpose of PM holding talks with US President, if he cant protest the honour of his citizens. "Indian Youth is being treated like terrorists", he stated.

He added that second flight carrying youth in shackles arrived yesterday and third flight is expected today. He opposed sending deportees flights to Amritsar and described it failure of Bhagwant Mann government in Punjab. He said that more than 800 illegal travel agents were working without any permanent office and business of illegal immigration was flourishing under the nose of Police.

Mohindra said that Indian youth had contributed hugely in the economy of America. The success of Silicon Valley in California is attributed to Indian IT experts. He said that students from India particularly from Punjab had contributed over five lakh billions in the USA and their future is not secure. He described the episode of deportations a complete failure of diplomacy and India's foreign ministry.

Mohindra demanded from Chief Minister of Punjab to announce a policy to rehabilitate the deported youth since they have lost all their fortune. He said that most of youth had gone abroad due to lack of opportunities in their home country. He said that state government had fundamental duty to resettle the deported youth.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 17 Feb 2025, 02:08

What do asylum seekers tell us about India?

US data shows most Indian asylum seekers are Punjabi and Gujarati - groups from India's wealthier states, better able to afford high migration costs.

In contrast, Indian Muslims and marginalised communities and people from conflict zones like the regions affected by Maoist violence and Kashmir, rarely seek asylum, the study says.

So most Indian asylum seekers are economic migrants, not from the country's poorest or conflict-hit regions.

The arduous journey to the US - whether via Latin America or as "fake" students in Canada - costs 30-100 times India's per capita income, making it accessible only to those with assets to sell or pledge, the study says.

Not surprisingly, Punjab and Gujarat - top origin states for unauthorised Indians - are among India's wealthier regions, where land values far exceed returns from farming.

"Even illegality takes a lot of money to pursue," the study says.

What's fuelling illegal Indian migration?

While rising asylum claims may seem linked to "democratic backsliding" in India, correlation isn't causation, the authors say .

Punjab and Gujarat have long histories of emigration, with migrants heading not just to the US but also the UK, Canada and Australia.

Remittances - India received an estimated $120bn in 2023 - fuel aspirations for a better life, driven not by poverty but "relative deprivation", as families seek to match the success of others abroad, the study says.

A parallel industry of agents and brokers in India has cashed in on this demand.

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Re: "For those willing to pay upwards of $100,000 to reach USA"

Post by Revelations » 18 Feb 2025, 19:31

Costa Rica agrees to be transit hub for Indian immigrants deported from US





With the Donald Trump administration in the United States deporting illegal immigrants, Central American country Costa Rica has agreed to serve as a transit point for repatriating illegal immigrants, including Indian nationals, according to an official statement released on Tuesday.

The first group of 200 migrants is scheduled to arrive at Juan Santamaría International Airport on a commercial flight this Wednesday, as confirmed by a statement from the office of Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chaves Robles. These individuals will be temporarily housed at a migrant care facility in Costa Rica before being repatriated to their countries of origin.

"The Government of Costa Rica agreed to collaborate with the United States in the repatriation of 200 illegal immigrants to their country. These are people originating from countries in central Asia and India," said the statement, adding "Costa Rica will serve as a bridge for them to reach their countries of origin".

However, the officials did not disclose the specific number of Indian deportees.


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