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Colombia: Venezuelan influx on a decline

The Venezuelan migrant influx into Colombia has seen a notable decline for the first time in a decade

- Anadolu Agency

Bogota, Colombia - The Venezuelan migrant influx into Colombia has seen a notable decline for the first time in a decade, according to the country’s migration agency.

The agency noted a peak in Venezuelan migrants in December 2022, with a subsequent month-by-month decrease. As a result, in December 2023, the number of Venezuelan­s in Colombia decreased from 2,896,748 to 2,864,796, indicating a 1.11 per cent decline.

Fernando Garcia, the director of Migration Colombia, attributed this decline to the resumption of diplomatic relations between Colombia and Venezuela, suggesting that Venezuelan­s are returning home.

However, experts challenge this view, asserting that the decrease is not explained by improved relations even after years of ongoing fragmentat­ion between the two countries. In fact, the outflow of migrants from Venezuela remains the largest displaceme­nt crisis in the world, reaching nearly 7.7mn people by August 2023, with an 8.3 per cent increase in migration from 2022 to 2023.

“There has been a shift in migration patterns, with more individual­s targeting the United States via the Darien Gap - a challengin­g land connection between Central and South America - rather than staying in Latin America,” Ronal Rodriguez, a professor at the Venezuelan Observator­y, a think-tank at the University of Rosario in Colombia, told Anadolu. The Darien Gap has witnessed an increase of migrants crossing, including those from Venezuela, Ecuador, Haiti and China. Panama’s Security

Minister Juan Manuel Pino revealed that approximat­ely 70,000 migrants have crossed the Darien jungle so far in 2024, a notable increase from the previous year, with Venezuelan­s constituti­ng over 60 per cent of Darien crossings in 2023.

According to the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, in January 2023, approximat­ely 75 Venezuelan­s went through each day. By late April, this figure had surged to around 850, and by August, it had risen again to about 2,000.

Analysts suggest that the policies of Colombian President Gustavo Petro’s administra­tion and a rise in xenophobia in other countries in the region are contributi­ng to the decline in migration, highlighti­ng a lack of prioritisa­tion of immigratio­n issues.

Rodriguez notes the absence of a clear policy, creating uncertaint­y about the future of Venezuelan­s in Colombia.

Nearly three million Venezuelan­s live in Colombia, but despite the immigratio­n authority granting over 500,000 Temporary Protection Permits during Petro’s government, migrants argue that it is not enough. The administra­tion’s removal of the Border Management Office, responsibl­e for migrant integratio­n, has further limited collaborat­ion between local government­s and migrants’ access to establishe­d projects and programmes around the country. Although President Petro attributes the Venezuelan exodus to economic blockades, often blaming US sanctions, Rodriguez counters this, saying that migration trends began before these sanctions in 2019, emphasisin­g that 2018 saw the most significan­t migratory growth.

The Petro government, says Rodriguez, has chosen to resume bilateral relations with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s government, sidelining the immigratio­n issue. This stance has raised concern among migrants who are looking north for a better future.

“The proximity of speeches between President Petro and the Venezuelan government has made migrants question their decision of making Colombia their home,” said Rodriguez. “When migrants hear that the president denies or even justifies their reality, that creates anxiety in them, it generates fear.”

Venezuelan migrants are also leaving countries like Peru, and Chile, where they had originally migrated, due to rising xenophobia, discrimina­tion and legislativ­e discussion­s that seek to criminalis­e irregular migration. The government­s of these countries have militarise­d their borders in order to stop the arrival of undocument­ed people to the country, especially those of Venezuelan origin.

In Colombia, xenophobia does not reach the levels of Peru or Chile due to the similarity between the Colombian and Venezuelan cultures. But along with insecurity in the country, xenophobia has also grown in the last few years. Rodriguez said there is a tendency ‘to hold Venezuelan­s responsibl­e for security problems’. “It is easier to point the finger at the foreign population than to say that insecurity problems are the product of the peace process that we are experienci­ng in Colombia, or the long-lasting effects of the (coronaviru­s) pandemic and the dynamics of crime in cities.”

The fear with the growth of xenophobic dynamics adds to an environmen­t of instabilit­y, making many wonder if it is worth staying or if they should go in search of the American dream, even if it means risking the wellbeing of their families by undertakin­g that dangerous route.

When crossing the Darien, migrants are exposed to multiple human rights violations, including sexual violence, murders, disappeara­nces, traffickin­g and robbery by organised criminal groups.

There has been a shift in migration patterns, with more individual­s targeting the United States via the Darien Gap rather than staying in Latin America RONAL RODRIGUEZ

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