INTL 'Here there is a chance': Venezuela crisis triggers exodus to Colombia

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I am posting this rather long but very informative article as a new thread because it deals so well with so many of the current issues especially that of the now reversed immigration from Venezuela to Colombia. I spent two lovely Christmas seasons in the late 1970's in San Cristobal (a lovely town or it was then) and I have also made this crossing, across this very bridge.

In the 1970's the bridge was a stark reminder of how much richer one side was on the other, the houses (even the slums) on the Venezuelan side were mostly clean, brightly painted and many had flowers and gardens growing next to the shacks. The Colombian side was dismal, dirty, smelly with open sewers of mud running through them.

I took what I call a "mental picture" to remind me because the difference was so stark, my physical pictures are gone but the mental one sprang to life as I read this, this morning.

Now, I gather things are the other way around; note the number of women with infants and small children fleeing to Colombia - the article doesn't mention this but I know this is because so many babies are starving to death - either Mom can't get enough food to produce milk and/or there is simply no formula.

My heart goes out to the grandfather who is mentioned basically evacuating his daughter and young grandchild. No, there is no word of the father and we have no back story here, but no matter how that child was conceived, granddad is going to give up everything (or what little is left) to walk many miles in the rural countryside and across an international border, to give that baby a chance at life.

Things really are THAT BAD...I will also say that if this article is correct Colombia is treated the fleeing Venezuelans a lot better than Venezuela treated the Colombians fleeing war and poverty in the 1970's.

*Note Pictures did not post, they are worth going to the link to see them (I did try) https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...-venezuela-crisis-triggers-exodus-to-colombia


'Here there is a chance': Venezuela crisis triggers exodus to Colombia

Colombia is struggling to adapt to its new role as a destination for migrants from Venezuela fleeing political turmoil by crossing the 1378-mile-long border

by Joe Parkin Daniels in Cúcuta

Shares
5

Saturday 5 August 2017 11.00 BST

From the moment it opens at 8am each day, the Símon Bolívar bridge between Venezuela and Colombia heaves with people.

Up to 25,000 Venezuelans come to the sweltering border town of Cúcuta each day – many of them lugging empty suitcases to buy basic foodstuffs such as rice, flour and pasta that they cannot find back home.

A growing number, however, cross the border with no intention of turning back.

“No country is perfect but in Venezuela people can’t dream of a future for themselves,” said Ramón Araújo. “I would love to have stayed there, but there was no way.”

This week, four months of political turmoil in Venezuela came to a head with the inauguration of a new national assembly that will have the power to rewrite the constitution and dissolve state institutions.

Meanwhile, the country is plagued by hyperinflation (predicted to reach 1600% by the end of the year), plunging supplies of food and medicine, and spiraling rates of murder and malnutrition.
3000.jpg

A Venezuelan woman is helped by Colombian soldiers crossing the Simon Bolivar international bridge from San Antonio del Tachira, Venezuela on 25 July 2017.
Photograph: Luis Acosta/AFP/Getty Images

Nicolás Maduro has said the new assembly will give voice to those previously excluded by the political process; his opponents describe the move as a naked power-grab.

“There is no humanitarian crisis here, what we have is love, what we have is a crisis of the right-wing fascists,” said former foreign minister Delcy Rodriguez, as she was sworn in as the new assembly’s president on Friday.

Many ordinary Venezuelans are simply voting with their feet: Colombian authorities are scrambling to deal with an influx of migrants across the porous 1378-mile-long border between the two countries.

And the crisis in Venezuela has triggered another one in Colombia, as the country struggles to adapt to its new role as a destination for migrants and refugees.

“Up until now we haven’t been able to talk of a massive exodus of Venezuelan citizens, but yes, the number of incoming [Venezuelans] is high,” Christian Krüger, the director of Colombia’s border control agency wrote in an email. “We believe that it will get worse, but it would be imprudent to make judgements before the fact,” he said.

Officials from Bogotá have travelled to Turkey to study its response to the Syrian refugee crisis, and this week Colombia’s foreign minister, María Ángela Holguín announced a new shelter in Cúcuta to offer food and shelter to Venezuelan migrants.

“We are ready to offer help to any Venezuelan citizens that need it,” Holguín told a local radio station.

The current wave reverses a previous wave of movement between the two countries: millions of Colombians headed to Venezuela in the 1970s and 80s.

At the time, Venezuela was rich with oil dollars and Colombia wracked the civil war and cartel violence. Nowadays, a cratering economy and rampant crime have made daily life untenable for many ordinary Venezuelans.

Araújo sold everything he had and made the journey overland to the narrow Simón Bolívar bridge in February. Now he lives in dusty slum in the hills above Cúcuta, and finds occasional work on construction sites. He hopes to save and send money back to his mother and sisters in Venezuela.
3000.jpg

Venezuelan citizens enter Cúcuta, Colombia from San Antonio del Tachira on 25 July 2017.
Venezuelan citizens enter Cúcuta, Colombia from San Antonio del Tachira on 25 July 2017. Photograph: Luis Acosta/AFP/Getty Images

Leidy Leguízamon, a 24-year-old new mother from Caracas crossed the border with her infant son Jacob last month and hopes to carry on to Bogotá, Medellín or Cali once she and her father Luís have saved enough for the coach fare.


“Back home, everyone fights over a tiny bit of rice,” she said in a line for a free lunch at a church shelter a few blocks from the border that serves Venezuelans as they arrive. “The minimum wage doesn’t bring in enough to eat.”

Like many of his countrymen, Luís is strikingly gaunt, a result of the morbidly nicknamed “Maduro diet”. A study by three Caracas universities claims that 74.3% of Venezuelans have lost weight since chronic food shortages began in 2014. Malnutrition is widespread, according to numerous NGOs.

Like most Venezuelans in Colombia, the Leguízamons do not have work permits, so they find themselves in unreliable informal jobs – selling sweets and cigarettes on the street, or in construction.

But even that is better than the alternative, said the elder Leguízamon. “I would rather go hungry here – where there’s a chance I can earn – than back there,” he said.

There are currently an estimated 300,000 Venezuelans in Colombia, according to UNHCR statistics published in July this year. So far in 2017, 50,000 Venezuelans have applied for asylum worldwide, nearly double last year’s total, though many that cross the border in Cúcuta chose to remain informal.

“Every day we are seeing up to 25,000 people cross the border,” said Colombian border control official. “Of that number approximately 10% get their passports stamped and head into the centre of the country, or onto other countries.”
3000.jpg

Venezuelan citizens rest in Cúcuta on 25 July 2017.
Venezuelan citizens rest in Cúcuta on 25 July 2017. Photograph: Luis Acosta/AFP/Getty Images

Last week, Colombia announced that it would grant temporary status to over 150,000 Venezuelans who entered the country legally before 25 July but overstayed their visas. They will be permitted to work and have access to social services. An estimated 100,000 who crossed illegally will not have access to the new measure.

Without a developed state apparatus to support the new arrivals, the slack is being picked up by NGOs and church organisations.

The Scalabrini International Migrant Network, an Italian NGO tied to the Catholic church, runs a shelter and parish in Cúcuta, which receives both Venezuelans and Colombians. “What we are seeing in Venezuela is a vicious cycle without an exit,” said the Rev Francesco Bortignon, who leads the Scalabrinis mission in Cúcuta.

“We can’t talk about security, only insecurity; the hunger is real; the repression against those that want to change the government is shameful,” he added, illustrating why so many are arriving to Cúcuta in massive numbers.

Adding to the migrant crisis is a slow-brewing diplomatic one. Colombia’s president, Juan Manuel Santos, has been one of the region’s most vocal critics of Maduro’s regime. Maduro has responded by calling Santos a “slave of the North American empire”.

Despite turmoil back home and bickering between presidents, newly arrived Venezuelans are hopeful of building new lives in Colombia.

After waiting in line for a whole day, Samuel Fernández, a young volunteer at an evangelical church in Caracas, seemed almost giddy to have his passport stamped by Colombia officials.

He was planning to head for Bogotá, carrying a small suitcase loaded with clothes – the only possessions he hadn’t sold. Sheltering from the pounding afternoon sun, he considered the future. “I will build a family in Bogotá, as I couldn’t anymore in Caracas,” he said. “I have only hope and love in my heart.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...-venezuela-crisis-triggers-exodus-to-colombia
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
no thought what-so-ever of actually staying and fighting for the freedom of their own country ....
One there are a lot of younger people who ARE doing just that, if you've been following the news from there you would know of massive demonstrations, people being gunned down in the streets and people starting to arm themselves.

Two, it is very hard to fight back when you are a young mother with a dying infant that you need food NOW in order to nurse and/or formula for; ditto it is hard for anyone to fight back when life is reduced to hunting through garbage cans.

There are places in the cities where lines form for hours to check out the TRASH for anything edible....

Yes, I'm sure some of the people fleeing could be soldiers but a lot of them are in no condition to do so, they MIGHT be able to get their health back and then start training IN COLOMBIA; in fact I am expecting to start hearing any day now that the Colombian government might just start actively (or quietly) training such an armed resistance force, I'm sure the CIA will also love to help, they always do.
 

Knoxville's Joker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Looks like I need to make preparations for my mission foundation to start building some churches there. Though that said we also pack in loads of humanitarian activities as part of the building process.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Looks like I need to make preparations for my mission foundation to start building some churches there. Though that said we also pack in loads of humanitarian activities as part of the building process.

I have posted updates on my friend the Priest (who is also a monk) and the lengths he goes to, to try and keep his congregation fed (Catholics don't usually go in for an after mass lunch, at least they didn't historically in Venezuela but he's thrown open the Church Kitchen and doing it now).

To a large degree, the Churches are the only ones that have been able to do much to help people; though Protestant ones may have some issues; I don't know how Maduro is about them but I think the Chavez regime was rather hostile (that's not unusual, there were huge hearings going on when I was there in the 70's about Mission work in the Amazon, I actually got to attend one of them).

I think Maduro has too much on his mind to bother as much about it, but I could be wrong - but yes Churches and Charities do seem to be the way forward; there is going to be one-huge and massive mess too clean up before this is over and while the US may have an interest in getting the multinationals back into the oil fields; I suspect any direct funding towards "famine relief" would end up in the pockets of whatever government replaces the current one; that is sadly just how things tend to work in that part of the world.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
i24NEWS English‏Verified account @i24NEWS_EN 16m16 minutes ago

#BREAKING: Controversial new Venezuela assembly fires dissident attorney general after military 'laid siege' to her office


Noga Tarnopolsky‏Verified account @NTarnopolsky 13m13 minutes ago
Noga Tarnopolsky Retweeted Yusnaby Pérez

#Breaking: After being attacked by uniformed officers Venezuela's Attorney General alleges regime wants to erase evidence of "corruption".



RTÉ News‏Verified account @rtenews 13m13 minutes ago

#Breaking Venezuela's new constituent assembly approves removing chief prosecutor Luisa Ortega from her job
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
no thought what-so-ever of actually staying and fighting for the freedom of their own country ....

Ever heard of getting your non-combatants out of the way before letting slip the dogs of war?

The article said the woman was across the border with her baby and her father, no mention of the location of the baby's father.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
And here you go - the government is claiming to have won the first round but not all sources agree and in any case the military is the traditional way of revolt in the country, going back to the 18th century...

Military 'rebellion' suppressed in Venezuela
Updated / Sunday, 6 Aug 2017 15:56
President Nicolas Maduro has been accused of orchestrating a power grab
President Nicolas Maduro has been accused of orchestrating a power grab

Venezuelan authorities have suppressed a military rebellion near the central city of Valencia, a ruling official said.

The incident came days after President Nicolas Maduro formed a legislative superbody that has been condemned internationally as a power grab.

Socialist Party deputy Diosdado Cabello made the announcement shortly after the release of a video showing a group of men in military uniform announcing a rebellion and calling for a broad uprising against Mr Maduro.

One witness in the area of a military base in the town of Naguanagua reported hearing gunshots before dawn, but Mr Cabello said the situation had been brought under control.

Officials said the rebels, whom they described as "terrorists," were trying to steal weapons and that seven people were detained after the attack on the base.

Maduro ally appointed as Venezuela's new attorney general

Venezuela's new assembly has replaced the country's attorney general with Mr Maduro's human rights ombudsman, Tarek Saab, a government ally who the opposition says has turned a blind eye to state abuses.

Yesterday, the assembly fired Luisa Ortega and ordered her to stand trial in its first session, confirming opposition fears that it would use its powers to root out critics of the president.

After taking his oath, Mr Saab vowed to stop violence against security forces and Maduro loyalists.

He criticised Ms Ortega for what he called her "complicity and inaction" in the face of the bloodshed that has occurred in recent months.

Ms Ortega had become Mr Maduro's main challenger from within the ruling socialist movement since the start of opposition street protests in April, which have left more than 120 people dead as rock-throwing protesters were met by state security forces firing rubber bullets and water cannon.

She accused him of human rights abuses and of fudging the results of last weekend's election of the new 545-member constituent assembly.

The new legislative body has no checks on its powers, and critics say the decision to remove Ms Ortega is an ominous sign of a move by Mr Maduro into full-blown dictatorship.

Critics blame his state-centric policies for pushing Venezuela into an economic crisis marked by triple digit inflation and severe shortages of food and medicine.

The assembly will function for up to two years, according to a resolution it passed yesterday.

The body's stated goal is to lock in the policies of late President Hugo Chavez, who put Venezuela on its socialist path when he was first elected nearly two decades ago.

It will hold its sessions in the same legislative complex as the traditional congress, which could potentially be dissolved.

For now, the two bodies are set to hold sessions in parallel, separated by an ornate cobblestone courtyard.

The opposition, in control of the country's traditional congress, boycotted last Sunday's vote, meaning that all candidates for the new body were Maduro allies.

His loyalist Supreme Court sent a letter to the assembly announcing its indictment of Ms Ortega, accusing her of "alleged commission of serious misconduct," without providing details.

Her office was blocked by armed National Guardsmen and she said she was roughed up as she tried to enter the building, claiming that one guardsman hit her with his body shield.

Ms Ortega ended up fleeing the chaos on a motor bike.

A half block away a colourful street mural was painted on a wall saying "The Constituent Assembly Will Go Forward".

"The firing of Chief Prosecutor Luisa Ortega is the first dictatorial act of an illegitimate constituent assembly. We reiterate our solidarity with the Venezuelan people," Juan Manuel Santos, president of neighbouring Colombia, tweeted.

Chile's leader Michelle Bachelet called Ms Ortega's firing another step in Venezuela's "democratic breakdown".

Washington singled out Mr Maduro for financial sanctions last week and Pope Francis urged him not to inaugurate the divisive new body.

South American trade bloc Mercosur indefinitely suspended Venezuela, adding to international pressure on Mr Maduro to dismantle the newly created assembly and restore democracy.

The assembly passed a resolution "emphatically rejecting" Mercosur's action.

Authorities yesterday returned opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez to his home, his wife tweeted, where he is serving house arrest for his role in leading anti-government protests in 2014.

He had been taken to a military prison on Tuesday after having been granted house arrest in July.
More on

News
World
Politics
Nicolás Maduro
Venezuela
Luisa Ortega

Read Next
Two Chinese tourists arrested over Nazi salute
Two Chinese tourists arrested over Nazi salute
News
https://www.rte.ie/news/world/2017/0806/895540-luisa-ortega/
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Venezuela arrests over 'uprising attempt'

1 hour ago
From the section Latin America & Caribbean

Share this with Facebook
Share this with Twitter
Share this with Messenger
Share this with Email
Share

Image copyright Twitter
Image caption "This is not a coup but a military and civil action," the group's leader said

Arrests have been made in Venezuela after soldiers tried to launch an uprising against President Maduro, officials say.

The ruling Socialist Party's deputy leader, Diosdado Cabello, called it a "terrorist attack" on Twitter.

It happened in Valencia in Carabobo state in the north-west of the country.

A video released on social media showed uniformed men saying they were rising against a "murderous tyranny". Venezuela has seen months of protests.

"This is not a coup but a military and civil action to re-establish constitutional order," said the leader, who gave his name as Juan Caguaripano.

What is behind the crisis in Venezuela?
Venezuela's chief prosecutor rejects dismissal

Mr Cabello said full control had been restored at the Fuerte Paramacay military barracks.

A commanding chief of the armed forces, Remigio Ceballos, tweeted that seven people had been arrested.

Earlier, gunfire was reported on social media. Others said they heard the sound of loud patriotic singing at the military base.

In his short speech, Caguaripano said that his group - which he called the 41st Brigade - was standing against the "murderous tyranny of President Nicolás Maduro".
Media captionYour video guide to the crisis gripping Venezuela

He named young people who have died after attending anti-government protests: Neomar Lander, Geraldine Moreno, Juan Pablo Pernalete and "lots of others with their cardboard shields".

Lander, 17, and Pernalete, 20, died earlier this year, while Moreno, 23, was shot in the face in a 2014 demonstration. Two members of the National Guard were later jailed for her death.

Regular protests have been held in the country since April. The opposition accuses left-wing President Maduro of trying to entrench his power.

On Saturday, the newly inaugurated Constituent Assembly held its first session. It immediately voted to dismiss Chief Prosecutor Luisa Ortega, a former ally of President Maduro turned major critic.
Media caption"This is a dictatorship," Luisa Ortega told reporters

Members of the assembly were elected after a controversial vote last Sunday, in which no opposition candidates participated and which has led to allegations of voting fraud.

The government has strongly denied the allegations. Mr Maduro repeatedly says he is trying to keep the peace.

The assembly has the power to rewrite the constitution and could override the opposition-controlled National Assembly.
Related Topics
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-40843494
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...lencia-caracas-shooting-arrests-a7879321.html

Venezuela military base attacked as video shows men in uniform claiming start of coup

Samuel Osborne
@SamuelOsborne93
30 mins ago
81 comments

Venezuelan authorities said they have suppressed a military rebellion near the central city of Valencia shortly after a small group of men dressed in fatigues released a video declaring themselves in rebellion.

The ruling Socialist Party's deputy, Diosdado Cabello, said there had been a "terrorist attack" at a military base.

His announcement came after a video emerged showing a group of men in military uniform saying they were launching an uprising against unpopular President Nicolas Maduro to restore democracy.

One witness in the area of the military base in the town of Naguanagua reported hearing gunshots before dawn, but Mr Cabello said the situation had been brought under control.

Troops acted quickly to control the situation at the Paramacay base in the central city of Venezuela, he said on Twitter.

Officials said the rebels, whom they described as "terrorists," were trying to steal weapons and that seven people were detained after the attack on the base.


Mr Cabello, a former military man and vice president under the late President Hugo Chavez, called the attackers "mercenary terrorists."

Socialist party loyalists also regularly use the term "terrorist" to describe opposition leaders and protesters.

The announcement came after a small group of men dressed in military fatigues, some armed with assault rifles, released a video declaring themselves in rebellion in Carabobo state, where Valencia is located.

In the video, a man who identified himself as Juan Carlos Caguaripano, a former National Guard captain, said: "We demand the immediate formation of a transition government." He was flanked by about a dozen men in military uniforms.

"This is not a coup d'etat," he said. "This is a civic and military action to re-establish constitutional order. But more than that, it is to save the country from total destruction."

He said any unit refusing to go along with its call for rebellion would be declared a military target.

Local reporters published videos appearing to show dozens of Venezuelans near the base in Valencia taking to the streets to protest the government before being pushed back with tear gas.

Other videos circulating on social media showed a police convoy speeding down a road amid the sound of apparent gunfire.
venezuela-protests.jpg
Anti-government activists set up barricades during a protest against the elections for a Constituent Assembly in Caracas (AFP)

The Paramacay base, surrounded by a residential neighbourhood in Valencia, is one of Venezuela's largest and houses some of the country's most important armaments including Russian-made tanks.

Government allies were quick to denounce the attack as a right-wing plot aimed at bringing down the "Bolivarian revolution" started nearly 20 years ago by the late Hugo Chavez and carried on by his protege Mr Maduro.

"These attacks, planned by delirious minds in Miami, only strengthen the morale of our armed forces and the Bolivarian people," tweeted Socialist Party official Elias Jaua.
venezuela-civilwar.jpg
Anti-government activists protest (Getty)

Mr Caguaripano, the leader of the alleged plot, has a history of rebellion.

In 2014, while a captain in the National Guard and amid a previous wave of anti-government unrest, he released a 12-minute video denouncing Mr Maduro.

He later reportedly sought exile after a military tribunal ordered his arrest, appearing in an interview on CNN en Espanol to draw attention to dissatisfaction within the ranks over Venezuela's demise.
nicolas-maduro.jpg
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro celebrates election results after a national vote on his proposed Constituent Assembly (EPA)

The South American nation has for months been in the throes of a political crisis with protests that have left more than 100 dead, nearly 2,000 wounded and over 500 detained.

Last week, two opposition leaders were taken from their homes in the middle of the night by intelligence agents and hauled to prison.

It came days after the country's president formed a legislative superbody internationally condemned as a power grab.

On Saturday, Mr Maduro's new "constituent assembly" removed the chief prosecutor from her post and ordered her to stand trial, confirming opposition fears that it would use its powers to root out critics of the government.


SubscribeRSS

Less than a minute ago
EdZuiderwijk
Those pesky CIA agents, bungled it again. Can't they do anything right for once?

ReplyShare

0
3 minutes ago
Expose Corruption
The Yanks are in this up to their necks. Scum.

ReplyShare

-1
6 minutes ago
berlingooner
Has Oliver North come out of retirement ?

ReplyShare

-2
9 minutes ago
Pоbеdа

Right-wing opposition leaders have attempted to portray the deaths as examples of state repression and evidence of the "dictatorship" that they are aiming to topple. Mainstream media have by and large echoed this version of events, using titles like “Venezuelan Regime Has Blood On Its Hands” and “Venezuela's Tiananmen Moment."

Some outlets have even gone as far as claiming the elected government of President Nicolas Maduro as engaging in “a campaign of state genocide.”

The reality of the situation on the ground, however, demonstrates something very different.

Here’s a breakdown of those killed since the opposition protests began.

http://www.telesurtv.net/english/ne...rotest-Deaths-in-Venezuela-20170422-0016.html

ReplyShare

+1
11 minutes ago
The_Vindícator
It's all a conspiracee between the CIA, Boris Johnson and the Ancient Illuminated Seers of Bavaria.

Must be true 'cos it said so in the Rag Mag from the Metropolitan University of Bognor Regis, Socialist Waster AND the Independent.

ReplyShare

+1
17 minutes ago
Dwayner
So they're not terrorists but they threaten to kill anyone who doesn't cooperate.
Sounds like Reagan's death squads never went away. Oh ! They didn't.

ReplyShare

+5
17 minutes ago
Dougpiranha
This fiasco has the fingerprints of CIA/ NSA all over it, their psyops people have been softening up public opinion to legitimize regime change.

ReplyShare

+2
19 minutes ago
Dougpiranha
Yankee coup attempt.

ReplyShare

+3
20 minutes ago
dc258
Could be the end of their experiment in socialist tyranny

Result = Same as every other time. Everyone in poverty. Nation destroyed. Corrupt socialist party members take everything they can and kill anyone that disagrees.

This is the part where the conspiracy explains away repeated failure, right? The US did it. CIA. Capitalist plot against socialists etc.....I'm sure it will be different under Corbyn right? "Real" socialism. Far fewer dead.

ReplyShare1 reply

-2
11 minutes ago
Periphvision
It's always the immediate economic war against any actual democracy that springs up that destabilises them prior to actual dictatorial military attack.

ReplyShare

0
34 minutes ago
Dodgers
This is the kind of developing world sh@thole that Corbyn and Abbot and co would turn us into given half a chance.

ReplyShare1 reply

+2
12 minutes ago
Leesheep
yeah yeah and if I pointed to Nazis and said 'this is why conservatism is bad' then you would lose your 5h!t

ReplyShare

0
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Venezuelan authorities said they have suppressed a military rebellion near the central city of Valencia shortly after a small group of men dressed in fatigues released a video declaring themselves in rebellion.

Anyone DEAD in this attack? No?

FAKED by pro-Maduro forces......
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
Why should Columbians support the failure of socialism in Venezuela or why should any non-socialist country support the failure of socialism anywhere.........Why should Columbians be forced to accept migrants from a failed state.............
 
Top