The Manila Times

Venezuelan­s flee to Brazil but misery awaits

- AFP PHOTO AFP

BOA VISTA: Manuel and his wife never stop coughing but they’re happy: at least their baby doesn’t have measles anymore.

They’re grateful for small mercies these days, but just a few years ago they were part of oil-rich Venezuela’s middle class. Today they live with and economic chaos to seek refuge across the border in Boa Vista, Brazil.

The escapees have transforme­d the once sleepy town of Boa Vista, capital of Roraima state.

Last year a shelter was opened at a gymnasium but it could not hold the seeking refuge wherever they can—in squares, parks and street corners.

At the Tancredo Neves gymnasium shelter the refugees live in hammocks, or little huts. Clothes hang everywhere and you’re considered lucky if you get a mattress.

There’s space for 180, according to the UN refugee agency, but an estimated 600 people are now resident there. About 40,000 Venezuelan­s are scattered across the state,

Most are from eastern Venezuela, while more than half a million have Colombia, hoping for a break from A Venezuelan refugee feeds her son, at a shelter in the city of Boa Vista, Roraima, Brazil. the violent unrest and economic meltdown plaguing the country under President Nicolas Maduro.

the gymnasium, where many cook, using tins as improvised pots. Some get rice, pasta and vegetables but those who cannot buy food go to a charity kitchen where donated food is served. The dirt and poor ventilatio­n are overwhelmi­ng.

“You can’t eat this,” said Katiuska, 43, looking into a rice soup cooked in a dirty old tin.

Four months ago she left Venezuela with her husband and two sons “to change our lives,” but she’s discovered that in Brazil “we don’t live—just survive.”

They sleep in a cardboard shelter under a tree. It’s actually one of the better spots, offering shade in a city where the thermomete­r hits 97 F (36 C).

It won’t do them much good when the rainy season starts, however. The vulnerable migrants are now increasing­ly at risk of contractin­g and spreading tropical diseases.

“The Venezuelan­s’ situation is getting worse at this kind of shelter because it’s unhealthy and promotes the spread of illnesses,” said municipal doctor Raimundo de Sousa.

There’s still an attempt to keep up morale.

A group of young men boiling a chicken running around the yard was also homeless.

“That chicken’s only alive because it’s not in Venezuela,” where people struggle to get enough food, Luis, 19, said.

Volunteer cooks say they do everything they can to make sure everyone gets a meal. There are never any leftovers.

Monica Becker, 31, was cleaning up her infant son.

She’d come all the way from Puerto La Cruz on Venezuela’s Caribbean coast. By the time she reached the border with her two sons, she was out of money and only reached Boa Vista with help of a church group.

Becker is grateful for a place to sleep but wishes the toilets were better -- there are just two for everyone at the center and the smell is powerful.

When she thinks of her mother and brother, who remained in Venezuela, Monica cries. “I didn’t want my children to die of hunger, so I came here.”

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