Imperial Valley Press

‘funds simply aren’t there’ for humanitari­an response, UN says

- BY MEGAN JANETSKY

MEXICO CITY – Countries in the Americas are reeling as the flow of migrants reaches historic levels, but internatio­nal “funds simply aren’t there” for humanitari­an needs, a United Nations official said.

Ugochi Daniels, deputy director of operations for the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration, said a larger and coordinate­d regional effort is necessary for a longer term solution to the steady movement of vulnerable people toward the United States.

But other global crises – among them the war in Ukraine, conflict in Sudan, Morocco’s earthquake – have pulled global funds away, Daniels said Wednesday in an interview with The Associated Press.

The U.N. estimated that this year through August, it needed $55.2 billion to take on compoundin­g global crises, but it received funds for only 71% of that.

A growing number of countries like Panama and Costa Rica are pleading for internatio­nal aid in handling the flood of migrants, though Daniels would not say who should pay the tab.

“Obviously, it’s not an issue that can be solved by any one country,” she said. “The unpreceden­ted flows in the region require attention – internatio­nal attention.”

The flood of migrants to the Mexico-U.S. border has swelled in recent years, with recent days seeing thousands of people crossing daily just into Texas. In fiscal year 2017, U.S. authoritie­s stopped migrants 310,531 times on the border, while in the first 11 months in fiscal year 2023, they recorded more than 1.8 million stops.

The crush of people – many of them Venezuelan­s – is overwhelmi­ng Latin American government­s, many of which lack the funds to take care of their own citizens. On Wednesday, Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chaves announced a state of emergency due to the number of people entering the country.

“We all know that there is a migration crisis throughout the entire American continent. We are fundamenta­lly a country of passage for migrants, people who come, who pass through Costa Rica largely trying to reach the United States,” Chaves said.

Lack of aid dollars is not a new problem, and has been especially notable in the mass migration from Venezuela.

As more than 7.2 million people have fled the South American nation’s economic and political turmoil, the mass migration has received pennies on the dollar in aid compared to other global migration crises like Syria’s. For years, countries receiving the bulk of Venezuelan migrants like Colombia, Peru and Ecuador have pleaded for more support.

In September, a U.N. report said that $400 million was required to address the Venezuelan migration, but that the internatio­nal body had received only a third of that.

“Aid dollars are clearly insuffi

cient,” said Juan Pappier, deputy director of the Americas for Human Rights Watch. “But it’s also a reflection of the insufficie­nt attention that Latin America gets, and the insufficie­nt interest that Latin American government­s have in properly addressing this issue.”

Pappier said the lack of aid to help pay for migrant services generated resentment and xenophobia in many South American nations, which led to more restrictiv­e policies. Such policies pushed Venezuelan­s to travel north through routes like the Darien Gap, helping fuel the new flood of migration to the U.S., he said.

Analysts and Daniels note the internatio­nal response has been defined by largely short-term patchwork measures.

Pressures by the U.S. on countries to keep migratory flows at bay and create new barriers has produced temporary pauses of arrivals to the border, but that has been followed by new surges, said Adam Isacson, an analyst with the Washington Office on Latin America.

“They’re just looking for new ways to keep pushing the numbers down for as long as they can,” Isacson said. “It’s not permanent, it’s super super short term.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/ERIC GAY ?? Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande river to the U.S. from Mexico seek direction from a guardsman on Friday in Eagle Pass, Texas.
AP PHOTO/ERIC GAY Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande river to the U.S. from Mexico seek direction from a guardsman on Friday in Eagle Pass, Texas.

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