The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Venezuelan­s rush to Peru to beat passport deadline

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TUMBES, Peru: Days before Peru was set to tighten its border controls, Venezuelan migrants dashed to get into the country Thursday as new passport rules threatened to leave thousands stranded in Ecuador or Colombia.

In Tumbes, on the Peruvian side of the border with Ecuador, lines of people waited to have their papers checked, surrounded by banana plantation­s and sweating from the tropical climate.

Many had traveled on foot, but they had to accelerate their progress after Peru’s announceme­nt last week that it would implement stricter border controls from this Saturday.

Following Ecuador’s lead, Peru decided it will only allow in Venezuelan migrants in possession of a passport.

The problem is that only around half of the Venezuelan­s heading south to escape poverty and economic crisis are carrying passports, according to Colombia’s migration director, Christian Kruger. The other half have ID cards.

Ecuador acted after more than half a million Venezuelan­s entered the country of less than 17 million people since the start of 2018.

Peru has also been struggling to cope as Venezuelan­s flow into the country at an average rate of 2,500 per day — although the United Nations Refugee Agency says that number has spiked recently.

Earlier this month a record 5,100 people crossed in a single day.

Peru’s migration superinten­dent, Eduardo Sevilla, said on Thursday that “there are already 400,000” Venezuelan­s in the country and if they continue flooding over the border at the same rate, there will be “half a million by the beginning of November.”

Many queueing at the border only left Venezuela on foot at the beginning of August.

They’ve already travelled 2,000 kilometers, but those who get through face another 1,200kilomet­er journey to the Peruvian capital Lima.

Local churches handed out food to the weary and hungry migrants as they waited.

Meanwhile, Peru has called for calm, saying the number of Venezuelan­s affected by the new policy will be relatively minor.

“No-one’s talking about the closing of borders,” said Interior Minister Mauro Medina.

He said Peru is improving its “migration control for reasons of order and security,” adding that “80 per cent of Venezuelan­s who come into the country do so with a passport.”

Colombia’s Foreign Minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo said earlier this week the country would petition the UN to appoint a special envoy “to coordinate a multilater­al action to combat this humanitari­an crisis” at next month’s general assembly in New York. — AFP

 ??  ?? Venezuelan nationals queue at the binational border attention centre (CEBAF) in Tumbes, northern Peru in the border with Ecuador. — AFP
Venezuelan nationals queue at the binational border attention centre (CEBAF) in Tumbes, northern Peru in the border with Ecuador. — AFP

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