Kuwait Times

Fleeing pandemic, many Venezuelan migrants head home

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CALI: For the second time in less than a year, Jesus Pena is on the run. The first time, he was fleeing poverty in his native Venezuela. Now, he’s heading back to his crisis-stricken home to escape the death spread by the novel coronaviru­s. “We want to go back so we don’t die,” the 49-year-old explained during a stop in Cali, Colombia. He arrived after 12 days of traveling, mostly on foot, from neighborin­g Ecuador-one of the Latin American countries worst hit by the pandemic.

The blisters dotting his feet are the least of his worries. He is relieved because he, his wife, their son and his sister-in-law will soon board a bus chartered by the city to ferry Venezuelan migrants the 595 miles (957 kilometers) to the border. Dozens of others wait along with them. They fled Ecuador and other countries in the region, carefully sneaking through closed borders or taking advantage of opened humanitari­an corridors.

Many attempted to rebuild their lives in Colombia but have since given up. They decided to go home after finding themselves without jobs or income during government-imposed COVID-19 lockdowns-or out of fear of epidemic-fueled xenophobia. Pena lived only nine months in Loja, in the south of Ecuador. But he quickly grew afraid: “People are dying, no one pays attention or wears a mask, everyone is out in the streets.”

35,000 migrants returned

He also worried about what would happen if he

or one of his family members fell ill. At the hospital, “they would never move an Ecuadoran to make room for a Venezuelan,” he said. “It’s better to go back to our country,” he added. More than 35,000 Venezuelan­s have already crossed the region, coming from Colombia and elsewhere, according to Felipe Munoz, an official at the border between the two countries.

Colombia is home to about 1.8 million of the 4.9 million Venezuelan migrants who fled their country in recent as the former oil power’s economy crumbled. Bogota, which like the US does not recognize Nicolas Maduro as Venezuela’s president, has appealed for internatio­nal aid to manage a migrant crisis made more acute by the pandemic’s attendant health and economic emergencie­s. Colombia has recorded more than 3,700 cases of the coronaviru­s, versus some 250 reported in Venezuela. Ecuador, at 10,000 cases, is the region’s worsthit country after Brazil.

Pena is aware that the low number of Venezuelan cases has been doubted by Maduro’s opposition and he is bracing himself for the worst. “There’s no food, no water nor gas. But what can we do?” he said. Colombia said the migrants are leaving of their own accord and is checking their temperatur­es as they leave. Luis Plazas, 24, considers himself one of the lucky ones. — AFP

 ??  ?? CALI: Health workers wearing biosafety suits take a test of a local family during a checkup for the COVID19 novel coronaviru­s at Nueva Floresta neighborho­od in Cali, Colombia. — AFP
CALI: Health workers wearing biosafety suits take a test of a local family during a checkup for the COVID19 novel coronaviru­s at Nueva Floresta neighborho­od in Cali, Colombia. — AFP

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