Some analysts argue that Latino Muslims are the fastest growing group of Islam followers in the United States. The overall population of Latin America and the Caribbean nearly doubles that of the United States. Nevertheless, the center estimates that increases to the Muslim population in the Americas will be concentrated in the United States and Canada. While DoS data shows that the overall Muslim segment of the population in Latin America and the Caribbean grew at a rate of 23 percent between 20, in the United States it grew at a rate of about 17 percent over a similar period, from 2.75 million in 2011 to 3.3 million in 2015, according to the Pew Research Center. Most Muslims across the globe favor Sharia law, the strict Islamic rules that govern a Muslim’s life, according to the Pew Research Center Nevertheless, despite the recent growth in the Muslim population, Latin America and the Caribbean are projected to remain primarily Christian. The Muslim religion is the fastest growing in the world and Latin America appears to be no exception. military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba including at least one who allegedly went missing in Uruguay and resurfaced in Venezuela. Some South American nations are also housing detainees released from the U.S. Latin America has not been immune to the crisis involving migrants from war-ravaged nations in the Middle East, namely Syria.Ĭountries in the region with already large Muslim populations like Brazil have taken in thousands of Syrian refugees. The Pew Research Center has placed the 2010 Muslim population number, its most recent data, at between 840,000 and 1,720,000, much lower than the State Department. It remains unknown how many actually got through.Īn often cited estimate places the current number of Islam adherents in Latin America at over four million. Hundreds of them have been recently apprehended trying to sneak across the southwest border and into the U.S. military has sounded the alarm about human trafficking groups that specialize in bringing in individuals from terror-linked countries into the United States. Panama became the first Latin American country to join the U.S.-led coalition against ISIS.īoth SOUTHCOM and the State Department have recently warned that ISIS and the Lebanese Shiite terrorist group Hezbollah, an Iranian proxy, are operating in the region. They are also worried about self-radicalization in the region. Some of those nations have expressed concern about the possibility of such individuals returning radicalized and launching attacks. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), revealed earlier this year that “ hundreds” of Muslims from countries in the region, primarily Trinidad and Tobago, have traveled to the Middle East to fight on behalf of ISIS. commander in Latin America and the Caribbean warned that the Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL) is actively recruiting and radicalizing converts in his area of responsibility. Various sources, including State, show that in 2015 there were concentrations of Muslims across the region: in Brazil (1.5 million) Argentina (750,000) Colombia (10,000) Venezuela (100,000) Panamá (14,000) Suriname (81,200) and Trinidad and Tobago (60,000).īreitbart News’ analysis comes nearly a month after the top U.S. government.ĭoS, also known as State, did not include estimates for all the countries in Latin America and Caribbean, so the actual number of Muslim residents there could be much higher. Iran’s growing influence has sparked concern within the U.S. Some experts have indicated that Shiites outnumber Sunnis in the region. That means the Muslim population grew by nearly 700,000 (23 percent) between 20. The most recent data found in the International Religious Freedom Reports issued annually by the DoS reveal that there were at least an estimated 2,990,000 Muslims residing in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2015. Most of them are recent migrants and descendants of those who made the journey years and even generations ago, namely Palestinians, among others. Among the Muslims in the region are people who emigrated from Muslim majority countries – including Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Egypt, and Pakistan – and locals who converted.