Stabroek News

Venezuela’s neighbours seek aid to grapple with migration crisis

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QUITO, (Reuters) - A group of Latin American nations called yesterday for increased aid to assist thousands of Venezuelan immigrants fleeing the economic collapse of their homeland.

A group of 11 nations signed a declaratio­n in the Ecuadorean capital of Quito urging “substantia­lly increased” resources to grapple with the exodus of Venezuelan­s, which a U.N. agency recently described as reaching a “crisis moment.”

The declaratio­n, signed by officials from Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Colombia, Chile, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay, followed a twoday meeting of technical teams focused on the issue.

It urged increased spending on assistance for Venezuelan migrants by the countries themselves, as well as support from the United Nations and other “specialize­d internatio­nal organizati­ons.”

Ecuador’s Informatio­n Ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the declaratio­n. But Ecuador’s Deputy Minister of Human Mobility, Santiago Chavez, said aid from regional multilater­al organizati­ons was also being sought.

Delegation­s were still working to determine exactly how much aid they would request, Chavez said, adding that the figure would depend on the number of Venezuelan­s arriving in each country.

The statement also urged the government of President Nicolas Maduro to ensure that citizens have identifica­tion cards and travel documents in order to cross borders freely.

Venezuela did not participat­e in the Ecuador meeting despite being invited, organizers said.

Since 2015, more than 1.6 million Venezuelan­s have abandoned their country, with 90 percent arriving in neighborin­g South American countries, according to the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR.

Maduro and other top officials of Venezuela’s ruling Socialist Party have dismissed those migration figures as stemming from politicall­y motivated alarmism and “fake news” meant to justify foreign interventi­on in the country’s affairs.

Maduro said on Monday night that

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