Gulf Today

Brazil sends troops after clashes at Venezuela border

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SAO PAULO: Brazil will send troops to its border with Venezuela on Monday after residents of the Brazilian border town of Pacaraima drove out Venezuelan immigrants from their improvised camps, amid growing regional tensions.

The latest show of tensions began early Saturday, hours after a local merchant was robbed and severely beaten in an incident blamed on Venezuelan suspects, in Pacaraima, where an estimated 1,000 immigrants are living on the street.

Dozens of locals then attacked the two main immigrant makeshift camps and burned their belongings, leading Venezuelan­s to cross the border back into their home country. Shots were fired, stores were shuttered and debris littered the streets.

“It was terrible, they burned the tents and everything that was inside,” said Carol jarcano, a Venezuelan who works in Boa Vista and was on the border returning from Venezuela. “There were shots, they burned rubber tires.”

jarcano said that some Venezuelan­s reacted to the attack by destroying a car with Brazilian license plates.

She and her companions were among many who took refuge at checkpoint­s on the Venezuelan side of the border.

Three Brazilians were hurt in the clash es, a spokesman for military police said.

No informatio­n was immediatel­y available on the state of the Venezuelan­s involved. The merchant who was attacked “is known, he is a neighbour, and there was indignatio­n when it was learned that he had been robbed,” a local said on condition of anonymity.

“People began to expel Venezuelan­s who were in the center of the city, forcing them to return to their country.”

Roraima state Governor Suely Campos made a plea to temporaril­y close the border and asked Brazilia to send security reinforcem­ents to “face the increase in crime” she links to Venezuelan­s in the region.

In turn, the public security ministry vowed to send a contingent of 60 troops due to arrive Monday to join teams in the area.

In Costa Rica, hundreds of people took part in sometimes violent protests on Saturday using Nazi symbols to repudiate Nicaraguan migrants.

Some demonstrat­ors, carrying swastikas and sh outing anti-immigrant slogans, tried to attack Nicaraguan­s gathered in the central La jerced park in San Jose, and clashed with police who tried to contain them, Security Minister Michael Soto said, adding that there were only some minor injuries.

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