The Mercury News

Indigenous Pemon community vows to let aid in

- By Maria Ramirez

PUERTO ORDAZ, VENEZUELA >> Venezuela’s Pemon, an indigenous people living along the border with Brazil, are determined to allow into the embattled country any foreign aid that may arrive, even if that means a showdown with Venezuelan security forces and the government of President Nicolas Maduro.

Amid a hyperinfla­tionary economic collapse that has caused malnutriti­on and the exodus of millions of people, humanitari­an aid has become a flashpoint in an intensifyi­ng political crisis.

Opposition leader Juan Guaido said last week a global coalition that includes the United States was sending food and medicine to collection points in Colombia, Brazil, and an undisclose­d Caribbean island before delivering the aid into Venezuela.

Brazil has joined the United States as well as most countries in Latin America and Europe in recognizin­g Guaido as Venezuela’s legitimate interim leader, arguing that Maduro was re-elected in a fraudulent May 2018 vote.

But Maduro denies there is even a crisis, saying it is part of a U.S.-directed plot to undermine and overthrow his government.

Six leaders of the Pemon community residing in the “Gran Sabana” (or “Great Savannah”) municipali­ty bordering Brazil told Reuters that the population’s pressing needs should trump any politiciza­tion of humanitari­an aid.

The Gran Sabana, a grassy plain dotted with immense tabletop mountains in the southern state of Bolivar, is home to the only paved border crossing between Venezuela and Brazil.

“We are physically prepared — without weapons — and willing to open the border to receive the humanitari­an aid,” Gran Sabana Mayor Emilio Gonzalez told Reuters. “Neither the National Guard, not the government can stop this.”

Indigenous communitie­s boast a greater degree of autonomy than others in Venezuela.

The Bolivar governor and military chief for the region of Guayana, which comprises the states of Bolivar and Amazonas, were not immediatel­y available for comment.

“We are the natives of Gran Sabana and we will not allow some generals from outside to decide for us,” said Jorge Perez, the region’s councilman for indigenous communitie­s. “We are the legitimate authoritie­s.”

Perez said he conducts daily visits to the local hospital where patients and doctors alike despaired over the lack of medicine.

“For any emergency, they are taking us to Brazil — it’s embarrassi­ng; the hospital of Boa Vista is full of Venezuelan patients,” he said.

Boa Vista, the capital of the Brazilian border state of Roraima, has received tens of thousands of Venezuelan­s fleeing turmoil in recent years.

Mount Roraima, standing at over 9,200-feet high and straddling the border, is sacred ground for the Pemons and a spiritual symbol for many Venezuelan­s.

Mayor Gonzalez said authoritie­s in Brazil had not yet informed him of a precise date for the arrival of aid at the border.

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