Bangkok Post

Citizens of crisis-hit nation now top asylum seeker rankings

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CARACAS: Venezuelan­s for the first time led asylum requests to the United States as the country’s middle class fled the crashing, oil-dependent economy.

Statistics released by the US government’s Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services shows that 18,155 Venezuelan­s submitted asylum requests last year — a 150% increase over 2015 and six times the level seen in 2014.

China was second place, with 17,745 requests coming from citizens of that country.

Venezuela first cracked the top 10 asylum-seeking nations following months of sometimes bloody street protests in early 2014 seeking to oust President Nicolas Maduro.

But back then, amid the widespread jailing and harassment of opponents of the socialist administra­tion, fewer than 100 Venezuelan­s per month sought asylum.

That compares with 2,334 requests in December 2016, the last month for which data is available.

The number of applicants has skyrockete­d since December 2015, when the opposition took control of congress in a landslide election, giving hope to many that it could disrupt 17 years of socialist rule.

Instead of reaching out to his opponents, Mr Maduro retrenched and more and more Venezuelan­s began to uproot as triple-digit inflation pulverised salaries and widespread food and medicine shortages made life unbearable for many.

The vast majority leaving are middleclas­s Venezuelan­s who don’t qualify for refugee status reserved for those seeking to escape political persecutio­n, according to Julio Henriquez, director of the Bostonbase­d nonprofit Refugee Freedom Program, which has been drawing attention to the trend.

“The pace at which requests are increasing is alarming,” said Mr Henriquez, whose group obtained the still-unpublishe­d data in a Feb 8 meeting between US officials and immigratio­n lawyers.

“It’s not just worrisome that so many people are escaping the terrible situation in Venezuela but also that the practice of sending asylum-seekers with poor advice and false proof is proliferat­ing.”

Still, given mounting hardships at home, increasing numbers of Venezuelan­s are willing to take advantage of a more-than two-year delay for their applicatio­ns to be processed to obtain work authorisat­ion and seek short-term employment even if it means being eventually deported.

In the 2015 fiscal year, Venezuela was among the top 10 countries whose citizens had overstayed their visas in the US, according to an estimate of visa overstays by the Department of Homeland Security.

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