Daily Nation Newspaper

Venezuela heading for 'crisis moment' comparable to refugees in Mediterran­ean, UN says

-

THE exodus of migrants from Venezuela is building toward a “crisis moment” comparable to events involving refugees in the Mediterran­ean, the United Nations migration agency said on Friday.

Growing numbers are fleeing economic meltdown and political turmoil in Venezuela, where people scrounge for food and other necessitie­s of daily life, threatenin­g to overwhelm neighbouri­ng countries. Officials from Colombia, Ecuador and Peru will meet in Bogota next week to seek a way forward.

In Brazil, rioters this month drove hundreds back over the border. Peru tightened entry rules for Venezuelan­s, requiring them to carry passports instead of just national ID cards, though a judge in Ecuador on Friday rolled back a similar rule enacted there. Describing those events as early warning signs, a spokesman for the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, Joel Millman, said funding and means of managing the outflow must be mobilised.

“This is building to a crisis moment that we’ve seen in other parts of the world, particular­ly in the Mediterran­ean,” he said.

On Thursday, the IOM and UN refugee agency UNHCR called on Latin American countries to ease entry for Venezuelan­s, more than 1.6 million of whom have left since 2015.

Peru’s top immigratio­n official, Eduardo Sevilla, said Peru will exempt some Venezuelan­s from the passport requiremen­t, including parents with children seeking to join the rest of their family, pregnant women and the gravely ill.

But Sevilla said authoritie­s would also be vigilant of attempts to evade the new rule by claiming refugee status.

“Is UNHCR going to take responsibi­lity if that person commits a crime?” Sevilla said. “Our priority is to contribute to security and internal order by clearly identifyin­g people.”

UNHCR spokesman Andrej Mahecic said government­s had made “commendabl­e” efforts even though some reception capacities and services were overwhelme­d.

But he said “some disturbing images” had emerged from the region in the past week that risked stigmatisi­ng Venezuelan­s who had fled and complicati­ng efforts to integrate them.

An Ecuadorean judge, Judith Naranjo, on Friday lifted an order requiring that Venezuelan­s hold passports to be allowed entry, in response to a lawsuit filed by Ecuador’s state ombudsman together with local human rights groups.

“The judge accepted the request for the precaution­ary measures requested by the ombudsman,” the agency wrote on Twitter.

The ruling gives the government 45 days to develop a plan to address the situation of Venezuelan migrants.

Venezuela’s informatio­n minister, Jorge Rodriguez, said a new package of economic measures meant to address hyperinfla­tion would win over Venezuelan­s who had left the country.

Venezuela on Monday cut five zeros from prices and pegged the country’s currency to an obscure state-backed cryptocurr­ency. Critics slammed the plan as inadequate in the face of inflation that topped 82,000% in July and is expected to reach 1 million percent this year.

“The conclusion is that Venezuelan­s are going to return and furthermor­e we invite them to return because we need them for this recovery plan,” Rodriguez said.

- The Gaurdian

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia