Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Cape Verde qualify for first-ever football World Cup after 3-0 win
  • Al Jazeera reporter reunited with his brother as he’s freed by Israel
  • Trump to oversee Cambodia-Thai peace deal at ASEAN summit: Malaysia FM
  • Military and civil drills in Lithuania as concerns over Russia increase
  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,328
  • As NATO-Russia tensions rise, Lithuania prepares for conflict
  • US soya bean farmers battered by trade dispute with China
  • The politics of celebration: Captives vs prisoners
  • Afghan foreign minister in India: Why New Delhi is embracing Taliban now
  • Cameroon’s Issa Tchiroma Bakary claims presidential election victory
  • KL Rahul, India defeat West Indies in second Test to sweep series
  • Death toll from devastating Mexico flooding rises
  • Venezuela to close Norway embassy after opposition leader wins Nobel Prize
  • Why is India prosecuting Muslims who said ‘I love Muhammad’?
  • US news outlets say they will not agree to Pentagon reporting restrictions
  • Cape Verde clinches historic first qualification for FIFA World Cup
  • LIVE: Released Palestinians in Gaza allege hunger, abuse in Israeli jails
  • Joint Egypt-Qatar-Turkiye-US statement on Gaza: The full text
  • US Speaker Johnson warns government shutdown could be longest in history
  • Calls grow for release of Gaza’s Dr Hussam Abu Safia after ceasefire deal
  • Mexico flooding death toll rises to 64, with dozens still missing
  • President of Madagascar flees to ‘safe location’ amid deadly protests
  • Reviving US-Iran diplomacy difficult despite Trump’s ‘hand of friendship’
  • Five key takeaways from Donald Trump’s Gaza remarks in Middle East
  • As Palestinians return to ruins, will Trump’s ceasefire hold?

Fleeing by foot: The Venezuela exodus grows

By Al Jazeera Published 2019-12-06 11:02 Updated 2019-12-06 11:02 Source: Al Jazeera

Cucuta, Colombia – Caminantes, as millions of Venezuelan walkers are known, trek along South American highways, cross mountain ranges where temperatures dip below zero and move across low arid lands where temperatures soar to 40 degrees.

Political instability, economic collapse and rising insecurity in Venezuela have triggered the flight of nearly 4.5 million people from their home country in recent years. Four out of five have remained in South American and Caribbean countries where the availability of work, healthcare and education services offer the chance to carve out a brighter future.

They are day labourers and nurses, teachers and shopkeepers. Some travel with their families, others hope to send money to cash-strapped relatives back home where the cost of living has spiralled out of control and a typical month’s salary won’t buy more than a bag of rice.

The movement of Venezuelans out of their country represents one of the fastest-growing displacement crises in the world and the most severe in Latin America’s modern history – a humanitarian emergency stretching thousands of kilometres across multiple countries – to sparsely populated highlands of Colombia, the streets of Ecuador, Peru and Chile’s largest cities, and beyond.

Governments and humanitarian agencies responding to the crisis see the numbers of departures continuing unabated. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) estimate that another two million Venezuelans will leave by the end of 2020 if outflows continue as they have for the past two years.

Some have the resources to travel by plane, land and sea, but many have no choice but to walk for days on end with only their most valuable possessions, relying on the generosity of strangers. 

Many of the caminantes are compelled to travel through trochas, informal and dangerous border crossings through rivers and forests. They spend their nights under bridges, in open fields or, at times, in shelters established along the route. 

Transit centres run by humanitarian or church organisations offer Venezuelans some respite – the chance for a medical check-up, a warm meal, a new set of clothes, an internet connection or a counselling session. 

Although some countries, including Colombia, have largely maintained open-door policies, others, including Ecuador and Peru have recently put in place restrictions for Venezuelans wishing to enter the country. Many Venezuelans benefit from social services, despite the increasing strain their needs place on other nations’ already limited resources. 

Nevertheless, Venezuelans on the move must mainly rely on their own resources, resilience and hope for a better tomorrow.