The Borneo Post

Venezuelan­s continue to flow into Brazil

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PACARAIMA, Brazil: Venezuelan­s desperate to leave their collapsing country continued to flow into Brazil on Monday despite fear of antimigran­t violence in the tense border town of Pacaraima.

Two days after a riot in which locals targeted Venezuelan camps, driving some 1,200 migrants back over the border, the crossing, reinforced by extra troops, was again busy.

An army colonel in charge of the refugees programme at the base in Pacaraima said some 900 new arrivals were expected Monday. That’s more than the daily average and far above the trickle seen as tensions mounted over the last few days.

One of the many money changers crossing each day from the Venezuelan city of Santa Elena de Uairen to change the country’s almost worthless currency and the Brazilian real said Saturday’s violence had shaken everyone.

“We were scared and didn’t know what could happen,” he said, asking not to be identified.

We were scared and didn’t know what could happen.

Despite that fear, the pressure to get out of Venezuela — where under President Nicholas Maduro the once booming economy is in freefall and basic goods are hard to get — is even greater.

Brazil’s security minister, Sergio Etchegoyen, insisted that Brazil will remain open to its fleeing neighbors, saying ‘closing the border is unthinkabl­e, because it is illegal.’

Extra troops from the elite National Force and health specialist­s have been deployed to the area, the government said over the weekend.

Saturday’s violence was sparked by local outrage at the beating and robbery of a local merchant in Pacaraima. Venezuelan­s were blamed.

Within hours, rioters had attacked two camps housing some of the approximat­ely 1,000 refugees sheltering in the small town, burning their meager belongings and chasing them to the border. Shots were fired.

“It was terrible,” said one Venezuelan, Carol Maracano.

Jorge Idrogo, a 22-year- old Venezuelan who supports his family by selling food in Brazil, said refugees felt they had nowhere to turn.

“We were made to pay the price for the sinners. We shouldn’t be blamed for the bad done by our government,” he said.

But for Brazilians, as for other neighbors or turbulent Venezuela, the pressure is also rising. Just 12,000 people live in Pacaraima, meaning that almost one in 10 people there comes from across the border.

Tens of thousands of Venezuelan­s have crossed the border into Brazil over the past three years, while Colombia has given temporary residence to more than 800,000, with an estimated 3,000 entering daily.

Last week alone, 20,000 Venezuelan­s entered Peru, authoritie­s say. — AFP

Money changer

 ??  ?? View of cars in line and the Venezuelan Immigratio­n Point (on the background) from the border city of Pacaraima, Roraima, Brazil. — AFP photos
View of cars in line and the Venezuelan Immigratio­n Point (on the background) from the border city of Pacaraima, Roraima, Brazil. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Venezuelan migrants waiting outside the Ecuadorean migration office at the Rumichaca internatio­nal bridge in Tulcan, Ecuador, before crossing to Ipiales in Colombia, receive food from a group of Colombians who cross the border to help them.
Venezuelan migrants waiting outside the Ecuadorean migration office at the Rumichaca internatio­nal bridge in Tulcan, Ecuador, before crossing to Ipiales in Colombia, receive food from a group of Colombians who cross the border to help them.

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