Stabroek News Sunday

Regional News Colombia border teems as Venezuelan­s “without anything” flee crisis

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CUCUTA, Colombia (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Outside a church in the Colombian border city of Cucuta, Martha Carbajalin­o flips nervously through a pile of papers in her hands, standing with dozens of other migrant Venezuelan parents hoping to enroll their undocument­ed children into school.

Like some 1.5 million other people in the last two years, Carbajalin­o, 46, fled the hunger and violence of economic collapse and a political crisis in Venezuela.

A month ago she, along with her son and her mother, disabled by a stroke, crossed the border to scrape a living in Cucuta, a city receiving many of the Venezuelan­s leaving their homeland.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos has described the situation in Venezuela, with its hyperinfla­tion and severe recession, as a “humanitari­an crisis.” Colombia was spending millions of dollars to support the migrants, he said during a recent visit to the border.

Carbajalin­o hopes to get Luis Angel, her 7-year-old son who likes to draw robots, into school, but she cannot figure out how.

“I knock on doors, and no one opens for me,” she said through tears outside offices of the Scalabrini Internatio­nal Migration Network, a Catholic organizati­on for migrant aid.

“I don’t have anywhere to go and here, they say, they give help,” Carbajalin­o said.

NOT GOING TO SCHOOL

Thousands of Venezuelan children in Cucuta are not going to school, spending their days alone, following their parents, selling items on the streets or begging.

Every day more arrive. About 40,000 Venezuelan­s were legally entering Colombia each month at the end of 2017, according to Colombian authoritie­s, with thousands more thought to enter illegally.

All along the Venezuelan border, towns are struggling to cope. Last week, leaders of Brazil’s state of Roraima asked the Supreme Court for permission to close its border temporaril­y to halt the mass arrival.

While many Venezuelan­s with the means to migrate legally fled years ago, those leaving today are often seeking jobs to send money to families back home. Few seek political asylum.

Aid groups and authoritie­s warn poverty plus lack of schooling or daily supervisio­n will push children into the ranks of Colombia’s organized crime groups.

“If you don’t educate a child, you can’t correct that. You totally change the trajectory of their life,” said Yadira Galeano, Norwegian Refugee Council manager for Colombia’s border areas.

“Many kids end up being easy subjects for criminal or armed groups.”

In January, Colombia enacted a national decree allowing all foreign children to register and attend school while they sort out their documents and legal status.

But for children of undocument­ed Venezuelan­s, getting passports is virtually impossible.

“We know that Venezuela isn’t helping at all. They aren’t giving out passports,” said Jonathan Mejia, the official in charge of school enrolment in Cucuta, a city of about 670,000 people.

“We need support from the national government in this process of legalizati­on of documents,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Colombia has borne the brunt of the exodus of Venezuelan­s fleeing their once prosperous nation - the number living within its borders jumped by 62 percent in the second half of last year to more than 550,000.

In Cucuta, nearly 4,000 foreign students, mostly Venezuelan­s, have registered for school. But no one knows how many children of struggling families remain out of school, according to Father Francesco Bortignon, director of the local Scalabrini mission.

“School is not a priority,” the priest said. “The priority is food.”

Cesar Gil, 51, sells coffee from a streetcart with his four young children in tow.

On a typical day, they leave their rented room before dawn and return after dark with earnings of about $5. They survive on fried potatoes and corn cakes.

Gil had enrolled his children, all undocument­ed, in school in Cucuta.

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 ??  ?? People line up outside the Centro Piloto office seeking informatio­n about school enrollment for undocument­ed Venezuelan children in Cúcuta, Colombia on April 4, 2018.
People line up outside the Centro Piloto office seeking informatio­n about school enrollment for undocument­ed Venezuelan children in Cúcuta, Colombia on April 4, 2018.

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