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Colombia to ask UN for special envoy to manage Venezuelan migrant crisis

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BOGOTA, (Reuters) - Colombia will ask the United Nations to designate a special envoy to coordinate humanitari­an aid for the hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan migrants flooding into countries around the region, the foreign minister said yesterday.

More than a million people have arrived in Colombia from Venezuela over the last year and a half, fleeing a severe economic and political crisis in the socialist country that has caused food and medicine shortages.

“We are going to insist on the strengthen­ing of an emergency humanitari­an fund and we are going to propose the creation of a special envoy under the United Nations who can coordinate the multilater­al actions that are required because of the humanitari­an crisis we are living,”

foreign minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo, who took office on Tuesday, told journalist­s.

Colombia has spent millions on aid for Venezuelan migrants, including food, shelter and medical care. Many arrive with only what they can carry and are often underfed.

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley on Wednesday announced an additional $9 million in aid to Colombia to help with the crisis, during a visit to the border city of Cucuta. Trujillo said he had not yet received a formal extraditio­n request from Venezuela for six people it has accused of involvemen­t in the explosion of drones at a military event last week and who are believed to be in Colombia. Venezuela’s government has said the incident was a failed assassinat­ion attempt.

“I don’t like to talk about hypotheses - we’ll see . ... I’ve been told the request for extraditio­n has not formally arrived, if it’s going to arrive,” the minister said. “If it arrives, we will review it.”

Trujillo reiterated that Colombia would withdraw from the Union of South American Nations (Unasur), created a decade ago in an attempt to counterbal­ance U.S. influence in Latin America, in tandem with several other nations. Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay and Peru have already indefinite­ly suspended their participat­ion in the body.

“We’re consulting with other countries which apparently want to take the same route. If we consolidat­e a similar decision from these consultati­ons, we’ll act in conjunctio­n. If not, we’ll withdraw anyway.”

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