Venezuela’s ongoing migrant crisis is a global issue

Venezuela’s ongoing migrant crisis is a global issue

Photo: Carlos Eduardo Ramírez

 

When Venezuela commemorated its independence in July, almost six million Venezuelans spent the holiday away from their country, their family and friends, trying to meet their most basic needs as they fled the country’s severe economic, political and social crisis. The crisis has two faces: That of the migrants who leave to an uncertain future, and that of those who stay behind, in a country quickly becoming a “failed state.”

By The Hill – Janeth Márquez

Aug 6, 2021

The precarious conditions which were exacerbated by the pandemic – 59 percent of households with no food and 86 percent with no continuous water service – have driven people out, unmoored, only to become victims of prostitution, human trafficking, and slavery.





The Venezuelan exodus has become the second largest migratory crisis in the world, reaching levels never before seen in our hemisphere. We are thankful to 30 countries that, in mid-June, pledged more than $1.5 billion in grants and loans to aid Venezuelan migrants, but the gap is still too wide. The United Nations Humanitarian Response Plan for 2019 and 2020 received only 23.1 percent and 34.8 percent of the requested funding. By way of comparison, per capita funding collected for Syrian refugees was 10 times higher than for Venezuelans – $3,150 per Syrian refugee versus $265 per Venezuelan migrant, based on 2020 figures.

These figures represent only Venezuelan migrants, not the millions who remain in the country, caught with the decision to stay at home, risking starvation, or risk contracting the virus by going outside to try to put food on the table. Unfortunately, in today’s deteriorating Venezuela, staying at home is not an option. Minimum wage only covers 0.8 percent of the cost of the basic food basket, while remittances have been reduced by half. On average, 59 percent of households have not been able to access high-protein foods and children are the most affected.

Read More: The Hill – Venezuela’s ongoing migrant crisis is a global issue

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