Los Angeles Times

Colombians protest Venezuelan influx

As a migrant camp is set up in Bogota, residents say they fear crime and disease.

- associated press

BOGOTA, Colombia — Colombian authoritie­s moved homeless Venezuelan migrants to a soccer field filled with yellow tents and cots Tuesday, as the number of migrants fleeing their nation’s economic and humanitari­an calamity continues to rise.

The first migrant camp for Venezuelan­s in Colombia’s capital, Bogota, sparked a protest from residents who said they feared their new neighbors would bring crime and disease — the latest hint of escalating tensions throughout the region over the spillover of Venezuela’s crisis.

“They want to ruin our communitie­s!” a man cried out from his balcony overlookin­g the field of tents, later switching to English and yelling, “Welcome to the jungle!”

Colombian officials had been reluctant to set up refugee-style camps, even while similar sites have been created at Ecuador’s border with Peru and in Brazil. The new camp is modeled after a temporary refugee settlement for Syrian arrivals in France.

Authoritie­s fear camps could become permanent fixtures and hinder Venezuelan­s from integratin­g into society. But with more than 1 million Venezuelan­s now living in Colombia, officials said they had no choice but to offer tents to destitute migrants.

“There’s nothing else left to do,” said Cristina Velez, Bogota’s secretary for social integratio­n.

The migrants taken to the camp had been living in a park outside a bus station in conditions considered a potential public health risk. Families with young children were living cramped together alongside railroad tracks and cooking food over makeshift fires. Many had reached Bogota after long walks and didn’t have enough money to rent a room.

Velez said Colombian officials talked with their counterpar­ts in Paris to determine how to create a temporary camp, settling on a model that would keep families together while dividing up single men and women into separate tents. Migrants will be allowed to stay at the camp for up to three months and will be given informatio­n on accessing education and healthcare.

The initial capacity for the camp will be 500 people, though Velez said officials will evaluate whether a more permanent fixture is needed.

“We are going step by step because everything has changed very quickly,” she said.

The exodus from Venezuela began in mid-2015 and has climbed steadily as the country faces crippling hyperinfla­tion, food and medicine shortages and high crime. According to the United Nations, a total of 2.3 million people have fled in the last three years.

Colombia has received more of the migrants than any other nation at a time when it is already tackling a litany of domestic issues including surging coca production and a fragile peace process with leftist rebels.

The arrival of so many Venezuelan­s has sparked xenophobic attacks throughout the region. Last month, a group of Venezuelan­s living in Colombia’s capital said a mob beat a man to death and ransacked their homes while shouting slurs against foreigners. In Brazil, violence erupted after a local store owner was stabbed and beaten in an assault blamed on Venezuelan migrants.

As officials transporte­d the Venezuelan­s to the new camp in Bogota, a dozen angry residents stood in front of a gate attempting to block their arrival. Residents in a large new condominiu­m sat on their balconies now overlookin­g a field of yellow tents and cots and took photos. Several said they were angry officials hadn’t given them advance notice, while others worried Venezuelan­s would take their jobs.

“I’m going to be left with nothing,” said Esperanza Contreras, 60, who sells grilled corn and said she feared Venezuelan­s willing to work for less would steal her customers.

Still others complained that Colombian officials chose a field prone to flooding and expressed worry about sanitary conditions for several hundred migrants sharing 10 portable toilets. They said officials should do more to make sure migrants have access to safe water, food and jobs.

“Not even animals should be there!” Giovanna Sanchez, 35, shouted into a microphone outside the camp.

Venezuelan­s arriving at the camp said they were jolted by the protest.

“I feel less safe because of what we’re seeing outside,” one man said. “They don’t want us here.”

As they completed a registrati­on process and made their way toward the tents, many said they felt deceived by authoritie­s who had promised showers and food.

Ivonne Jaimes, 27, cried as she sat on a cot with her 1year-old son wondering when she would be able to bathe him. She feared they would end up spending more money living at the camp since they are not allowed to cook inside.

“I feel trapped here,” she said.

‘I feel less safe because of what we’re seeing outside. They don’t want us here.’ —Venezuelan man, commenting on protests encountere­d as he and others settled into a camp in Bogota, Colombia

 ?? Raul Arboleda AFP/Getty Images ?? VENEZUELAN­S who fled the crisis in their home country rest at a shelter in Bogota, the first such camp Colombian officials have establishe­d in the capital. It is modeled after a French shelter for Syrian refugees.
Raul Arboleda AFP/Getty Images VENEZUELAN­S who fled the crisis in their home country rest at a shelter in Bogota, the first such camp Colombian officials have establishe­d in the capital. It is modeled after a French shelter for Syrian refugees.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States