Bangkok Post

Caracas reopens border with Colombia after 3 years

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CARACAS/SAN CRISTOBAL: Venezuela reopened its border with Colombia yesterday, Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez said in a state television address on Monday, after a nearly three-year closure due to political tensions.

Venezuela closed the border in February 2019 as the Venezuelan opposition, backed by Bogota and Washington, attempted to bring humanitari­an aid into the country its land border with Colombia against the wishes of President Nicolas Maduro.

Venezuela is suffering from a multi-year, hyperinfla­tionary economic collapse.

Venezuelan authoritie­s at the time blocked the Simon Bolivar bridge, one of the main crossings between the two countries, with shipping containers reading “We want peace”.

They said the attempted aid shipment was part of a Washington-backed plot to overthrow Mr Maduro. The opposition and its allies accuse Mr Maduro of rigging his 2018 re-election.

Mr Maduro, a socialist, says the election was clean and blames US sanctions for Venezuela’s economic crisis.

“Thinking of our people, in the brotherhoo­d and cooperatio­n between the people of Colombia and Venezuela, has taken the decision to open the crossing for commerce,” Mr Rodriguez said.

Trade between the two countries, which share a porous 2,219km border, once amounted to some $7 billion (236 billion baht) per year before the border closed, according to Freddy Bernal, a representa­tive of Mr Maduro’s government in the western border state of Tachira.

Colombia’s government, which does not recognise Mr Maduro as Venezuela’s legitimate president, closed the borders between the two neighbouri­ng South American countries in March of 2020 due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. It reverted that measure in June 2021, a move that had not been matched by Venezuela until now.

In a statement, Colombian President Ivan Duque said that Mt Maduro was pressured to open the border due to “democratic resistance,” a reference to Venezuela’s opposition.

 ?? AFP ?? An aerial view shows the Simon Bolivar Internatio­nal Bridge between Cucuta, Colombia and San Antonio de Tachira in Venezuela, in 2019, as seen from Cucuta.
AFP An aerial view shows the Simon Bolivar Internatio­nal Bridge between Cucuta, Colombia and San Antonio de Tachira in Venezuela, in 2019, as seen from Cucuta.

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