Cape Argus

Tough time for fleeing Venezuelan­s

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BOA VISTA: Many Venezuelan­s thought they were leaving a collapsing economy for the land of milk and honey just next door.

But most of those fleeing the turmoil in Venezuela by walking into Brazil at an Amazon border crossing have found themselves surviving on the streets and sleeping in tents or hammocks, or on pieces of cardboard.

Their drama is part of a deepening regional humanitari­an crisis set off by the exodus of tens of thousands of Venezuelan­s who are voting with their feet and abandoning their country, mainly into neighbouri­ng Colombia, but also to Ecuador and Peru.

The city of Boa Vista, capital of the Brazilian border state of Roraima, has received 35 000 Venezuelan immigrants in the past two years, swelling its population by more than 10%. Today, some 3 000 are homeless, according to the mayor’s office.

Near the city bus terminal, Venezuelan­s sleep on grassy highway medians and in shopping areas. Some are lucky enough to spend the night in tents handed out by refugee agencies.

Others hang hammocks outside car body shops and auto-parts distributo­rs whose Brazilian owners allow them to spend the night under a covered area, as long as they are gone in the morning.

This generosity by local shopowners contrasts with an outbreak of xenophobic attacks on August 18 against Venezuelan immigrants at the border town of Pacaraima, ignited after a Brazilian was allegedly robbed and stabbed by Venezuelan­s in his home.

“Some Brazilians treat us badly, but not all of them,” said Anyi Gomez, a pregnant 19-year-old who came to Brazil with her mother and survives by using a squeegee to clean car windshield­s for change at traffic lights.

The prenatal care she is getting at a public hospital in Brazil made it worth leaving Venezuela, where her baby could have died for lack of food and medicine, she said.

On Tuesday, Brazilian President Michel Temer said the armed forces were being sent to Roraima for at least two weeks to help keep order and ensure the safety of immigrants. Temer blamed Venezuela’s authoritar­ian government for causing a regional crisis that requires a collective response.

Local churches provide meals or hand out bread and juice to the homeless Venezuelan­s.

“We have food, but no roof. And there is no work,” said Luis Daniel, from Caracas. “I came to get a job to take back things for my children, who are going hungry in Venezuela. But all I have now is exhaustion from sleeping outdoors.” – Reuters

WE HAVE NO ROOF. AND THERE IS NO WORK. I CAME TO GET A JOB TO TAKE BACK THINGS FOR MY KIDS WHO GO HUNGRY IN VENEZUELA

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