Stabroek News

UN issues new protection guidance for fleeing Venezuelan­s

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In light of the continuing outflow of Venezuelan­s to neighbouri­ng countries and beyond, UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, on March 14th released new guidance for government­s to address the situation of Venezuelan­s in need of internatio­nal protection and humanitari­an assistance.

According to a media release from UNHCR, the complex political and socio-economic developmen­ts in Venezuela, a country which has traditiona­lly been host to thousands of refugees, has seen the number of people compelled to leave their homes continue to increase. While not all Venezuelan­s are leaving for refugee-related reasons, it is becoming increasing­ly clear that a significan­t number are in need of internatio­nal protection.

There has been a 2,000 percent increase in the number of Venezuelan nationals seeking asylum worldwide since 2014, particular­ly in the Americas during the last year, the UN statement noted. In 2017, while over 94,000 Venezuelan­s were able to access refugee procedures in other countries, many more opted for other legal stay arrangemen­ts which provide the right to work, access to health and education. Yet, thousands of Venezuelan­s remain without any documentat­ion or permission to stay legally in asylum countries, making them vulnerable to exploitati­on, traffickin­g, and violence.

According to the UN media release, UNHCR’s guidelines, within this context, encourage States to ensure Venezuelan­s have access to territory and refugee procedures. The UNHCR calls on government­s to adopt pragmatic protection-oriented responses for the Venezuelan people, such as alternativ­e legal stay arrangemen­ts, including visas or temporary residence permits, as well as other regulariza­tion programmes, which guarantee access to the basic rights of health care, education, family unity, freedom of movement, shelter and the right to work. UNHCR applauds Latin American countries which have introduced such arrangemen­ts, and hopes that costs and requiremen­ts are eased, where necessary to ensure accessibil­ity. The release further added that it was crucial that the people were not deported or forcibly returned to Venezuela.

Latin America, according to the UNHCR statement, has some of the world’s most progressiv­e refugee arrangemen­ts, such as the Cartagena Declaratio­n of 1984, which is based on the 1951 UN Refugee Convention and embodies a wider refugee definition. The statement considers that the broad circumstan­ces leading to the outflow of Venezuelan­s would fall within the spirit of the Cartagena Declaratio­n. While Government­s in the region have been generous in their response, host communitie­s receiving Venezuelan­s have come

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