Santa Fe New Mexican

Despite aid, Venezuelan­s continue to head north

When word spread Washington’s tenuous relations with country made it difficult to expel migrants, many opted to risk dangerous trek

- By Genevieve Glatsky

Food shortages triggered by Venezuela’s economic collapse pushed Victor Rojas onto a bus and across the border to Colombia. But soon after arriving, he was in a state of shock.

He had quickly gone from studying music at a university in Caracas, Venezuela, and performing in orchestras to playing violin for tips on the streets of Bogotá.

But within months of arriving, he had received a special residency permit meant to address a surge of Venezuelan migrants. Eventually, his street performanc­es led to regular gigs at weddings and graduation­s, and the permit allowed him to formalize the growing business and gain an economic toehold.

The permit program, created by Colombia in 2021 and supported by the United States, was hailed as innovative and generous, particular­ly for a country with little experience with mass migration flows, and was seen as a potential model for large-scale displaceme­nt in other regions.

In the United States, which contribute­d more than $12 million to the program, the effort came to be seen by policymake­rs as one way to address the migration crisis at the U.S. border.

During a visit to Colombia two years ago, Secretary of State Antony Blinken called the program “a model for the region, and in many ways a model for the world.’’

The program, which was announced by Colombia’s then-President Iván Duque, a conservati­ve ally of the United States, grants temporary protected status to nearly all Venezuelan­s in Colombia, allowing them to live and work legally for 10 years, including many with no photo identifica­tion.

Rojas, 26, said his residency status “changed absolutely everything.”

“I had access to health care; I had access to banks,” he added.

By one measure, the program has been a major success — more than 2 million Venezuelan­s have registered for Colombian residency.

But by other measures, the policy is falling short, and many Venezuelan­s have left Colombia bound for the United States, contributi­ng to a record number of Venezuelan­s who arrived at the U.S. border last year.

While there is no data available on how many Venezuelan­s with a Colombian permit have migrated, many Venezuelan­s making their way north say they decided to abandon Colombia because they could not earn enough to support their families. Though Rojas has found financial stability in Colombia, he said he had no plans to make the country his permanent home.

Growing up studying classical music, he said, he always dreamed of going to Paris and New York, cities “where everything that moves my soul comes from.”

Since 2016, Venezuelan­s fleeing economic ruin under the socialist dictatorsh­ip of President Nicolás Maduro, have settled mainly in Colombia, Peru and Ecuador.

But when word spread that Washington’s lack of diplomatic relations with Venezuela made it difficult to turn away migrants, many decided to risk a dangerous trek through the Darién Gap, a jungle linking South and Central America, creating a humanitari­an and political crisis for President Joe Biden.

Venezuelan migration to the U.S. border exploded in recent years, to more than 189,000 crossings last year, from roughly 4,500 in 2020. This has made Venezuelan­s the second-largest migrant group, after Mexicans, entering the United States illegally.

For the United States, Colombia’s temporary visa program came to be seen as one way to address the surge, said Andrew Selee, president of the Migration Policy Institute in Washington.

“Over time, it acquired greater visibility as a means of managing migration in the hemisphere,” he said.

But in October, the Biden administra­tion abruptly shifted gears and started expelling most Venezuelan­s, using a pandemic-era public health rule. At the same time, the administra­tion created a new pathway that allows Venezuelan­s outside the United States to apply for humanitari­an parole, though critics say the process is cumbersome.

More than 7 million Venezuelan­s, one-fourth of the country’s population, have left since 2015 — the second largest migration in the world after Ukraine — and about one-third have ended up in Colombia. The two nations share deep linguistic, cultural and familial ties, and the approach toward the growing migrant population was quickly one of inclusion.

 ?? NATHALIA ANGARITA/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? People cross the Simón Bolívar Internatio­nal Bridge last year in Cúcuta, Colombia, on the country’s border with Venezuela. Colombia, with U.S. help, is providing temporary visas to Venezuelan migrants; still, financial struggles are leading many to leave for the United States.
NATHALIA ANGARITA/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO People cross the Simón Bolívar Internatio­nal Bridge last year in Cúcuta, Colombia, on the country’s border with Venezuela. Colombia, with U.S. help, is providing temporary visas to Venezuelan migrants; still, financial struggles are leading many to leave for the United States.

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