Venezuela‘s Vice President Delcy Rodriguez has said migration flows from the country is “normal”, and that the situation is being used as a tool to justify foreign intervention in the country.
The United Nation’s migration agency said the exodus of citizens out of Venezuela is nearing a “crisis moment” comparable to the situation of refugees in the Mediterranean.
“There has been an intent to convert a normal migratory flow into a humanitarian crisis in order to justify an international intervention in Venezuela,” Vice President Rodriguez told a news conference on Monday.
“We will not allow it.”
She criticised foreign agencies for using Venezuelan emigration provided by other countries.
According to United Nations nearly 2.3 million Venezuelans are currently living abroad and that more than 1.6 million have left since 2015.
President Nicolas Maduro said in a televised broadcast on Monday that opposition street protests and US financial sanctions had led some Venezuelans to “try their luck” in other countries but many were reconsidering that decision.
“More than 90 percent are regretting it, of this group that isn’t more than 600,000 Venezuelans who have left the country in the last two years, according to confirmed, certified serious figures,” he said.
Images of Venezuelans leaving the country on foot have raised alarms through the region as countries such as Ecuador, Peru and Chile seek to prepare for the growing flow of migrants.
“The situation is dramatic,” Ronal Rodriguez, a professor and researcher at the Venezuelan Observatory, a think-tank at the University of Rosario in Colombia, told Al Jazeera.
“There are cases of hypothermia, people who come from the coast, and are exposed to other temperatures that are not used to, these are not planned trips.”
“Some people receive help, but others are harassed. Many die on the road, and family members are forced to leave them behind to continue the journey. The internal changes taking place in the country are making things worse,” Rodriguez explained.
Venezuelan migrants children draw at a temporary shelter in the San Juan de Lurigancho district of Lima, Peru [Guadalupe Pardo/Reuters] |
Influx of migrants
On Monday, 13 countries in Latin America met in the Ecuadorean capital, Quito, to discuss regional strategies for managing the influx of migrants, with conclusions to be announced on Tuesday.
“We need to make the crisis visible and channel economic aid” to host countries and migrants, Ecuador’s acting Foreign Minister Andres Teran said while inaugurating the two-day meeting.
The meeting will seek humanitarian solutions to help Venezuelan migrants who risk being left without work or being exploited by employers, as well as becoming victims of sexual exploitation, human trafficking or xenophobia, Teran said.
Governments initially welcomed the migrants with open arms, remembering Venezuela’s role in welcoming those fleeing dictatorships and conflicts in the past.
But the exodus has ballooned this year, stretching social services, creating more competition for low-skilled jobs and stoking fears of unrest.
In the past weeks, both Ecuador and Peru announced tighter entry rules for Venezuelans, requiring them to carry valid passports instead of just national ID cards.
Ecuador also declared a state of emergency in three northern states which sees up to 4,200 Venezuelans arriving in the country daily.
“Migrants are in need of help,” Rodriguez of the Venezuelan Observatory said. “They need to be regularised, we know that many are being exploited. They are not identifiable, so if they die or they are killed, it is not easy to know who they were.”
“We also know of children that are being sold and are victims of trafficking, Venezuelan women are also being stigmatised, as many resort to prostitution,” he added.
Monday’s meeting was attended by senior officials from Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Peru, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay and Uruguay, according to the Ecuadorian foreign Ministry.
Colombia, Peru and Ecuador asked on Thursday for international aid to manage the migration surge that is overwhelming public services.