Texarkana Gazette

Driven by pandemic, Venezuelan­s uproot again to come to U.S.

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DEL RIO, Texas — Marianela Rojas huddles in prayer with fellow migrants after trudging across a slow-flowing stretch of the Rio Grande and nearly collapsing when she stepped on American soil for the first time.

“I won’t say it again,” interrupts a U.S. Border Patrol agent, giving orders in Spanish for Rojas and a group of 14 other Venezuelan­s to get into a detention van. “Only passports and money in your hands. Everything else — earrings, chains, rings, watches — in your backpacks.”

It’s a frequent scene across the U.S.-Mexico border at a time of swelling migration. But these aren’t farmers and low-wage workers from Mexico or Central America, who make up the bulk of those crossing. Among them are bankers, doctors and engineers from Venezuela, and they’re arriving in record numbers as they flee turmoil in the country with the world’s largest oil reserves and pandemic-induced pain across South America.

Two days after Rojas crossed, she left detention and got a bus out of the Texas town of Del Rio. The 54-year-old fled hardship in Venezuela a few years ago, leaving a paid-off home and career as an elementary school teacher for a fresh start in Ecuador.

But when the houseclean­ing work she found dried up, she decided to uproot again.

“It’s over, it’s all over,” she said on the phone to loved ones. “Everything was perfect. I didn’t stop moving for one second.”

Last month, 7,484 Venezuelan­s were encountere­d by Border Patrol agents along the U.S.-Mexico border — more than all 14 years for which records exist. The surprise increase is a harbinger of a new type of migration that has caught the Biden administra­tion off guard: pandemic refugees.

Many of the nearly 17,306 Venezuelan­s who have crossed the southern border illegally since January had been living for years in other South American countries, part of an exodus of millions since President Nicolás Maduro took power in 2013.

While some are government opponents, the vast majority are escaping long-running economic devastatio­n marked by blackouts and shortages of food and medicine.

With the pandemic still raging in parts of South America, they relocated again. Increasing­ly, they’re being joined at the U.S. border by people from the countries they initially fled to — like Ecuador and Brazil — as well as far-flung nations hit hard by the virus, like India and Uzbekistan.

Compared with other migrants, Venezuelan­s garner certain privileges — a reflection of their firmer financial standing, higher education levels and U.S. policies that have failed to remove Maduro but nonetheles­s made deportatio­n all but impossible.

The vast majority enter the U.S. near Del Rio, a town of 35,000, and don’t evade detention but turn themselves in to seek asylum.

Like many of the dozens of Venezuelan­s The Associated Press spoke to this month in Del Rio, 27-year-old Lis Briceno had already migrated once before. After graduating with a degree in petroleum engineerin­g, she couldn’t get hired in the oil fields near her hometown

of Maracaibo without declaring her loyalty to Venezuela’s socialist leadership. So she moved to Chile a few years ago, finding work with a technology company.

But as anti-government unrest and the pandemic tanked Chile’s economy, her company shuttered. Briceno sold what she could to raise the $4,000 needed to get to the U.S.

While Central Americans and others can spend months getting north, most Venezuelan­s reach the U.S. in as little as four days.

“This is a journey they’re definitely prepared for from a financial standpoint,” said Tiffany Burrow, who runs the Val Verde Border Humanitari­an Coalition’s shelter in Del Rio, where migrants can eat, clean up and buy bus tickets to U.S. cities.

They first fly to Mexico City or Cancun. Smugglers promoting themselves as “travel agencies” on Facebook claim to offer hassle-free transport to the U.S. for about $3,000.

The steep price includes a guided

sendoff from Ciudad Acuna, where the bulk of Venezuelan­s cross the Rio Grande and which had been largely spared the violence seen elsewhere on the border.

“If you’re a smuggler in the business of moving a commodity — because that’s how they view money, guns, people, drugs and everything they move, as a product — then you want to move it through the safest area possible charging the highest price,” said Austin L. Skero II, chief of the U.S. Border Patrol’s Del Rio sector.

Once in the U.S., Venezuelan­s tend to fare better than other groups. In March, Biden granted Temporary Protected Status to an estimated 320,000 Venezuelan­s, protecting them from deportatio­n and allowing them to work legally.

Also, Venezuelan­s requesting asylum — as almost all do — tend to succeed, partly because the U.S. government corroborat­es reports of political repression. Only 26% of asylum requests from Venezuelan­s have been denied this year, compared with an 80% rejection rate for

asylum-seekers from poorer, violence-plagued countries in Central America, according to Syracuse University’s Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use.

“I can write their asylum requests almost by heart,” said Jodi Goodwin, an immigratio­n attorney in Harlingen, Texas, who has represente­d over 100 Venezuelan­s. “These are higher-educated people who can advocate for themselves and tell their story in a chronologi­cal, clean way that judges are accustomed to thinking.”

Even Venezuelan­s facing deportatio­n have hope. The Trump administra­tion broke diplomatic relations with Maduro in 2019, so air travel is suspended, even charter flights, making removal next to impossible.

Briceno said that if she had stayed in Venezuela, she would earn the equivalent of $50 a month — barely enough to scrape by.

“The truth is,” Briceno said, “it’s better to wash toilets here than being an engineer over there.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? A group of migrants mainly from Venezuela wade through the Rio Grande as they cross the U.S.-Mexico border Wednesday in Del Rio, Texas. Record numbers of Venezuelan­s are crossing the U.S.-Mexico border as overall migration swells.
Associated Press A group of migrants mainly from Venezuela wade through the Rio Grande as they cross the U.S.-Mexico border Wednesday in Del Rio, Texas. Record numbers of Venezuelan­s are crossing the U.S.-Mexico border as overall migration swells.

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