Houston Chronicle Sunday

Venezuelan­s seeking food swarm border

- By Jim Wyss

CUCUTA, Colombia — They came looking for flour, pasta and cooking oil. They came looking for blood pressure medicine, spark plugs and condoms. They came looking for loved ones and a way out.

As Venezuelan­s on Saturday were allowed to cross the border into Colombia for the first time in almost a year, the river of wants they brought with them provided a stark glimpse of the needs on the other side of the border.

Carlos Texeiro traveled more than 400 miles from the city of Maracay with two empty suitcases for the chance to do a few hours of shopping in Colombia. Asked what he planned to take back with him, he said “anything I can find.”

But his primary goal was to buy diapers and powdered milk for his granddaugh­ter. Baby products are some of the hardest things to score in shortage-plagued Venezuela.

Texeiro, a candy sales- man, said people aren’t going hungry in Maracay yet, but they’ve had to radically change their diet.

“We can get fruits and vegetables,” he said. “What we don’t have are the things we eat every day, flour and pasta. Meat is just too expensive.”

“I wouldn’t say there’s hunger, but there’s huge lines. You have to wait in line to get anything you might want,” he added. “And you have to get lucky, very lucky.”

Others painted a darker picture. Nelson Buque said he lost 60 pounds in the past five months. A cabdriver in Miranda state, he said sometimes he goes home with cash but still hungry because he can’t find anything to eat.

“If you did find something open there would be lines that stretched for kilometers,” he said.

Trade along the 1,274mile Venezuela-Colombia border has traditiona­lly thrived. But on Aug. 19, 2015, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro began closing border crossings as he blamed Colombian “paramilita­ry groups” for attacking guards on an anti-contraband mission.

The border had been temporaril­y reopened a few times since then, sparking huge waves of Venezuelan shoppers. On Thursday, however, the two government­s said they had agreed to keep the bor- der permanentl­y open, but only to foot traffic and only during daytime.

Saturday’s 6 a.m. opening had a festive feel to it, as a military marching band greeted weary travelers, and police handed out balloon animals to children. Families waited to greet relatives they hadn’t seen since the border was closed.

Migration officials here are expecting 80,000 to 100,000 people to cross the border this weekend. Travelers are required to fill out paperwork, which was causing bottleneck­s but also seemed to be limiting the flow of people pouring into the city.

Not everyone was crossing with the intention of going home.

Alexandra Zapata said that when she heard that the border would be open, she knew it was time to make a decision. She had a job at the mayor’s office in San Cristobal, a position, she says, that would be prestigiou­s in any other country. But in Venezuela she didn’t earn enough to keep food on the table. She and her boyfriend crossed the internatio­nal Simon Bolivar bridge Saturday morning with the aim of getting to Colombia’s capital, Bogotá.

While Colombia is flush with goods, it’s also expensive for Venezuelan­s who rely on their devalued bolivar currency. As she and her boyfriend ate three empanadas, Zapata noted that the snack cost about one-tenth of her monthly salary.

Even so, she thinks life will be better on this side of the border.

“There’s not a future for young people in Venezuela,” she said.

 ?? Jim Wyss / Miami Herald ?? Venezuelan­s cross the border into Colombia on Saturday, on trips to buy food, medicine and other goods in short supply in their home country. Officials of the two nations agreed Thursday to keep the border open permanentl­y.
Jim Wyss / Miami Herald Venezuelan­s cross the border into Colombia on Saturday, on trips to buy food, medicine and other goods in short supply in their home country. Officials of the two nations agreed Thursday to keep the border open permanentl­y.

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