The Borneo Post

Brazil deploys army to boost security at Venezuela border

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BRASÍLIA: Brazilian President Michel Temer signed a decree Tuesday to send the army to ‘guarantee law and order’ on the border with crisis-hit Venezuela after recent violent clashes.

Earlier this month, more than a thousand homeless Venezuelan immigrants who had flooded over the border into Brazil’s northweste­rn Roraima state were driven back by an angry mob that rampaged through their makeshift tent following rumours a local shopkeeper had been brutally beaten by migrants.

Temer said his measure was aimed at providing “security for Brazilian citizens but also Venezuelan immigrants fleeing their country.”

He also branded Venezuela’s crisis as ‘ tragic,’ saying it “threatens the harmony of practicall­y the entire continent.”

Temer called on “the internatio­nal community to adopt diplomatic measures” to halt the Venezuelan exodus, as economic and political crises under President Nicolas Maduro’s regime drive hundreds of thousands to leave in hope of finding a better life elsewhere.

“Brazil respects the sovereignt­y of other states but we have to remember that a country is only sovereign if it respects its people and looks after them,” he added in an ominous warning to Maduro.

The United Nations says some 2.3 million Venezuelan­s are living outside their homeland, with 1.6 million of those having left since 2015.

Oil- rich but over- reliant, Venezuela is in a fourth year of recession brought on by a crash in oil prices in 2014. Some 96 percent of the country’s revenue is generated through crude.

The exodus has strained Venezuela’s neighbours, Colombia and Brazil in particular, but also other countries hosting thousands of migrants such as Ecuador, Peru

Brazil respects the sovereignt­y of other states but we have to remember that a country is only sovereign if it respects its people and looks after them. Michel Temer, Brazilian President

and Chile.

Like Brazil, Peru has seen outbreaks of anti-Venezuelan xenophobia.

“It’s not just Brazil enduring the consequenc­es, but Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and other Latin American countries,” Temer said in a televised address.

“That’s why we urgently have to find the way to change this situation.”

Some 60,000 refugees are in Brazil, while Peru recently tightened its border controls on Venezuelan­s after seeing more than 400,000 enter the country.

Temer didn’t reveal how many soldiers would be deployed to Roraima, but Defense Minister Joaquim Silva e Luna said “troops are already in place” at the border.

Security Minister Sergio Etchegoyen warned that Brazil “needs to discipline” the influx of migrants.

Meanwhile, Brazil said it was negotiatin­g with Caracas to avoid Venezuela’s state electricit­y provider Corpelec turning off the lights in Roraima over a US$ 40 million unpaid debt.

Brazil can’t pay it because of European Union and United States sanctions against Venezuela.

Brazil’s Foreign Minister Aloysio Nunes told AFP the country wanted to settle its debt but was struggling to find “a financial path” without breaking “the restrictio­ns and sanctions applied by Europe and the United States” against Maduro and his government.

Nunes said Brasilia has proposed an “exchange of accounts” since Venezuela is indebted to Brazil “far more than the US$ 40 million we owe the company.” — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows soldiers patrolling a street next to people from Venezuela after checking their passports or identity cards at the Pacaraima border control, Roraima state, Brazil. — Reuters photo
File photo shows soldiers patrolling a street next to people from Venezuela after checking their passports or identity cards at the Pacaraima border control, Roraima state, Brazil. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Michel Temer
Michel Temer

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