Philippine Daily Inquirer

ECUADOR, PERU TO TIGHTEN BORDER AMID VENEZUELAN EXODUS

- —REUTERS

QUITO/LIMA— Venezuelan­s entering Ecuador and Peru will soon be required to show their passports, rather than national identity cards, sources said on Thursday.

Ecuador and Peru have hitherto allowed Venezuelan­s to enter using national ID cards, providing desperate Venezuelan­s with an easier route out of their crisis stricken homeland.

Passport now required

“As of this Saturday the government will require anyone entering Ecuador to present his or her passport,” Ecuador’s Interior Minister Mauro Toscanini said.

The Foreign Ministry later said it would apply specifical­ly to Venezuelan­s.

Ecuador declared a state of emergency in three provinces this month after a spike in Venezuelan migrants crossing the Ecuadorean-Colombian border high in the Andean mountains.

Authoritie­s said up to 4,500 Venezuelan­s were crossing daily, compared with around 500 to 1,000 previously.

600,000 and counting

An official at Ecuador’s Foreign Ministry told local radio that some 600,000 Venezuelan­s had entered the country so far this year, with around 109,000 staying on.

Unable to afford flights and often earning a minimum wage of just a few dollars a month, Venezuelan­s have been taking days-long bus rides across South America, many passing through Ecuador on their way south to Peru or Chile.

Peru is also planning to require passports from Venezuelan­s soon, two government sources said on condition of anonymity ahead of a pending announceme­nt.

Immigratio­n officials estimated that there are nearly 400,000 Venezuelan­s in Peru, most of whom entered this year.

About 20 percent of Venezuelan­s enter Peru without a passport, Peru’s interior minister said earlier this week.

Fear of dislocatio­n

Venezuelan­s selling food or knick-knacks on the streets have become a common sight in Lima and Quito, raising fears among locals that the migrants could take their jobs and increase crime.

Ecuador’s President Lenin Moreno is left-wing like his Venezuelan counterpar­t Nicolas Maduro, but he has distanced himself from Caracas since taking office last year.

Centrist Peruvian President Martin Vizcarra took office in March after his predecesso­r, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, a vocal critic of Maduro, resigned in a scandal.

 ?? —REUTERS ?? LOSING HOPE A protester holds up a sign saying in Spanish: “Decent wages. Urgent” in Caracas on Aug. 16.
—REUTERS LOSING HOPE A protester holds up a sign saying in Spanish: “Decent wages. Urgent” in Caracas on Aug. 16.

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