Windsor Star

FLEEING EN MASSE

Venezuelan­s are leaving their crisis-torn country and entering Colombia and other bordering nations in a desperate bid to escape poverty and persecutio­n

- ANTHONY FAIOLA

Thousands of Venezuelan­s are pouring out of their crippled nation in one of the biggest migration crises in Latin American history, causing growing alarm in the region and prompting neighbouri­ng countries to rush thousands of soldiers to the border.

The massive scale of the exodus is being compared to the flow of Syrians into Western Europe in 2015. And, just as in that crisis, countries overwhelme­d by the flood of new arrivals are beginning to bar their doors.

“This is a humanitari­an crisis,” said Willington Munoz Sierra, regional director of the Scalabrini Internatio­nal Migration Network, a Catholic charity running a shelter in this border city, where desperate Venezuelan­s are now living in parks and cheap motels or sleeping on sidewalks. “In Venezuela, children are dying. People are starving and being persecuted. What they’re getting from us is a door in the face.” Nowhere is the crisis more acute than here in Colombia, where 3,000 troops are fanning out across the 1,400-mile border to contain an influx of Venezuelan­s fleeing a collapsing economy and an increasing­ly repressive socialist regime. Roughly 250,000 Venezuelan migrants have surged into Colombia since August, with 3,000 a day still arriving.

The sheer numbers have led to a backlash in Colombian cities and towns, prompting the national government last month to suspend the issuance of temporary visas for Venezuelan­s. Colombian authoritie­s are now launching operations in which dozens of Venezuelan­s a day are captured and expelled.

“Let’s go!” Maj. Jarlinzont Zea barked into his walkie-talkie one recent afternoon, jumping out of a police truck in this city of 650,000. Simultaneo­usly, dozens of Colombian officers and migration officials poured out of vehicles and stormed a park, sending panicked Venezuelan­s scattering.

One slight young woman, in a black tank top and denim shorts, didn’t move fast enough. “What’s your name?” an officer demanded.

“Andie,” she said, quaking. “Papers,” insisted the officer. “I don’t have any.” “Where are you from?” “Venezuela,” she said, near tears. “Please. I — can’t. I can’t go back.”

Latin America has seen mass exoduses before. In the decades after Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution, about 1.4 million Cubans fled the island, many heading for the U.S. During the 1980s and 1990s, more than one million people — more than a quarter of the population — were displaced during El Salvador’s civil war.

Yet there is little precedent in the region for the speed and intensity of the Venezuelan migrant crisis. After the leftist firebrand Hugo Chavez became president in 1999, thousands of Venezuelan­s — especially from the upper classes — moved out of the country. But the current exodus is far more dramatic. Under Chavez’s hand-picked successor, President Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela has reached a breaking point, with lower oil prices and economic mismanagem­ent leading to the world’s highest inflation rate and spiralling indexes of poverty and malnutriti­on. At the same time, Maduro’s government has jailed and allegedly tortured opponents, sparking a wave of political asylum seekers. Nearly a million Venezuelan­s have left their country over the past two years, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, with experts citing a surge during the second half of 2017, when the economy took a sharp turn for the worse. That figure is in addition to the hundreds of thousands who departed between 1999 and 2015.

“Our migration levels are now comparable to Syria or to (the Rohingya going to) Bangladesh,” said Tomas Paez, an immigratio­n expert at the Central University of Venezuela. More than a million Syrians, Afghans, Iraqis and others fleeing war and poverty poured into Europe in 2015, and 650,000 Rohingya Muslims have recently fled persecutio­n in Burma, seeking refuge in Bangladesh.

Globally, the growing Venezuelan diaspora is reshaping cities from Miami to Buenos Aires to Madrid. But most Venezuelan migrants are staying in Latin America, where countries are handling a dire situation in different ways. Peru, for instance, is offering temporary resident permits to Venezuelan­s, granting them the right to work. Last year, nearly 149,000 Venezuelan­s entered the country, up from 40,000 in 2016, according to Peruvian government statistics. “We’re going to Peru because I cannot feed my children in Venezuela,” said Liuiben De Navarro, a 28-year-old Venezuelan seamstress who, on a recent morning, crossed the Colombia border at dawn with her two young children. She and a host of other Venezuelan­s — army deserters, labourers, nurses — arrived to a barrage of offers from touts peddling trips on rickety buses to cities such as Quito, Lima and Santiago. A few feet away, desperate Venezuelan­s sold scrap metal to Colombian junk merchants.

“We buy hair!” yelled another Colombian merchant as a young Venezuelan woman sat in a chair under a tree, blushing as the scissors cut her long locks, destined to become a wig.

“I love my country,” De Navarro said. “But we cannot get food.” In Brazil, President Michel Temer declared a state of emergency after a visit to his country’s border with Venezuela last month and pledged $20 million plus a new field hospital to ease the crisis. Four shelters on Brazil’s southern border are now packed with Venezuelan­s, officials say, with an estimated 40,000 additional Venezuelan migrants residing in Boa Vista, the closest big Brazilian city to the border.

Officials say they will treat the newcomers as Brazilian citizens. But Temer also vowed to double the number of troops at the border. In October, overwhelme­d Panama imposed new visa requiremen­ts on Venezuelan­s, making it far more difficult for economic migrants and asylum seekers to enter the country. In January, 308 Venezuelan­s were expelled or agreed to return to their countries when faced with deportatio­n. From 2010 to 2016, Panama deported only 196 Venezuelan­s in total, according to government statistics. “We’ve been coming here en masse, like people fleeing from a war zone,” said Marcos Ardon, 47, a former business owner in Venezuela now working in a Panama City coffee shop. “You’re on the bus and you hear people speaking with a Venezuelan accent everywhere now. You feel like people don’t like it, that we’re too many here.” ezuelans heading in the opposite direction. Venezuelan­s have enjoyed access to special permits good for two years in Colombia’s border region, allowing them to stay up to seven days at a time. Facing severe food and medical shortages at home, most have stocked up on supplies, or visited hospitals, before returning across the border. But Colombian officials say those visas became a lure for Venezuelan­s looking to start a new life — bringing a dramatic surge across the border that reached a peak of 90,000 people a day in December. In early February, President Juan Manuel Santos suspended the issuing of new temporary visas and declared a massive militariza­tion of the border.

The moves cut the daily flow almost in half — though critics say it has only motivated migrants to cross at dozens of illegal entry points along the border, putting them at risk of harm from guerrillas and criminal bands. Locals, meanwhile, are accusing the Venezuelan­s already here of harming the economy and driving up crime. “We need to close the border,” said Nancy Pineda, a 30-year-old Cucuta fruit seller. “They come with fruit they buy for nothing in Venezuela and sell for prices here that I can’t compete with. They come here, killing and robbing Colombians. We need take our city back.”

That is just what Colombian authoritie­s say they are doing — staging operations several times a day in which they round up migrants lacking valid visas. Jozef Merkx, representa­tive for the U.N. high commission­er for refugees in Colombia, said the agency is concerned about the operations. But because Venezuela is not at war, its people are harder to classify as refugees in need of internatio­nal protection. “People fleeing Syria were generally seen as refugees, but that’s not the case with Venezuelan­s,” Merkx said. “Venezuela is not being bombed. It has some of the dimensions (of a refugee crisis), but not all Venezuelan­s are refugees.”

On a recent morning in Cucuta, however, the scene resembled a refugee crisis, with women clutching babies and exhausted families toting old suitcases streaming across a border bridge. The most desperate headed straight to the hospital. “We don’t know where to turn,” said Jose Urriola, 30, standing next to his 18-month-old daughter, Mavis, who languished in a hospital bed. The family had recently arrived from Venezuela. The little girl was malnourish­ed and had also developed a life-threatenin­g heart blockage. The hospital was petitionin­g national authoritie­s for funds before proceeding with the costly operation. Winston Martinez, deputy director of Colombia’s migration agency, said the country was not conducting “mass deportatio­ns.” Instead, he said, it was carrying out special operations designed to limit the number of Venezuelan­s without valid visas. He noted that the government is offering Venezuelan­s who have passports the chance to apply for special resident visas and has already awarded more than 160,000.

“Like any country, we need to have a safe and secure border,” Martinez said.

But many Venezuelan­s weren’t able to get passports in their homeland because of the cost and long wait. The operations are sending as many as 100 migrants a day back to Venezuela.

Shortly after Andie, the woman in the black shirt and jean shorts, was detained by police, they loaded her onto a truck. About 15 minutes later, she and three dozen other migrants were released at a border bridge swarming with mosquitoes. One by one, the migrants walked back toward Venezuela as the Colombian officers watched. And then only Andie was left. “You have to go,” said a female officer. More than a dozen Colombian officers surrounded the thin Venezuelan.

“I can’t,” Andie said, her voice breaking. “Please. I’m pregnant, and we won’t survive there.” The officer paused. “I’m sorry, honey, but you need to go back.” Andie nodded, then turned. Sobbing and clutching her stomach, she walked across the bridge.

The Washington Post’s Joshua Partlow in Panama City; Rachelle Krygier in Caracas, Venezuela; and Marina Lopes in Sao Paulo, Brazil, contribute­d to this report.

 ?? PHOTOS: IVAN VALENCIA/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? More than 3,000 Colombian troops are fanning out across the country’s 1,400-mile border to check the influx of Venezuelan migrants.
PHOTOS: IVAN VALENCIA/THE WASHINGTON POST More than 3,000 Colombian troops are fanning out across the country’s 1,400-mile border to check the influx of Venezuelan migrants.
 ??  ?? Jessica Sanchez and Jose Urriola comfort their 18-month-old daughter Mavis at a hospital in Cucuta after crossing into Colombia. Mavis has a heart blockage and needs surgery.
Jessica Sanchez and Jose Urriola comfort their 18-month-old daughter Mavis at a hospital in Cucuta after crossing into Colombia. Mavis has a heart blockage and needs surgery.
 ??  ?? Venezuelan­s without valid visas are detained in a truck by the Colombian police in Cucuta. As many as 100 migrants are being sent back every day.
Venezuelan­s without valid visas are detained in a truck by the Colombian police in Cucuta. As many as 100 migrants are being sent back every day.
 ??  ?? Colombia has suspended the issuance of temporary visas to migrants.
Colombia has suspended the issuance of temporary visas to migrants.
 ?? PHOTOS: IVAN VALENCIA/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Venezuelan migrants wait at the border in Cucuta. Nearly a million Venezuelan­s are estimated to have left their country over the past two years.
PHOTOS: IVAN VALENCIA/THE WASHINGTON POST Venezuelan migrants wait at the border in Cucuta. Nearly a million Venezuelan­s are estimated to have left their country over the past two years.
 ??  ?? Colombian police mobilize during a search operation in Cucuta to send migrants back to Venezuela.
Colombian police mobilize during a search operation in Cucuta to send migrants back to Venezuela.

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