Tuesday, August 28, 2018

AZVEN UPDATE 25-8-18

AZVEN UPDATE 25 AUG 2018

Note: yet another communist / democrat / progressive / socialist disaster.
Coming to Mexico on Dec. 1st. ?
will the USA be ready? Unfortunately, very unlikely.
Thx


Venezuela migrant crisis: Peru tightens border controls
2 hours ago.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-45307003

Media captionThe Venezuelans are fleeing their country's political and economic crises
Peru has brought into force new entry requirements to control the numbers of Venezuelan migrants.
Venezuelans will no longer be admitted with just an identity card, although children, pregnant women and the elderly are exempted.
Similar rules were introduced in Ecuador last week, only to be overturned by a court.

Tens of thousands of Venezuelans are fleeing their country amid chronic shortages of food and medicines.
The country's longstanding economic crisis has seen more than two million citizens leave since 2014,
causing regional tensions as neighbouring countries struggle to accommodate them.

The UN is setting up a special team to co-ordinate the regional response.
However, the UN's migration agency has warned that the continent faces a refugee "crisis moment" similar to that seen in the Mediterranean in 2015.

What is happening in Peru?
The authorities in Lima set a deadline of midnight on Friday for the new passport rules to come into force.
Many Venezuelans have been looking to start a new life in Peru - which has one of the region's fastest growing economies - travelling there via Colombia and Ecuador.

How Venezuela's crisis drove out millions of people
Venezuelan's bridge of desperation
My first week as a BBC Venezuela correspondent

On Friday there was a rush of people heading to the Peruvian border and Ecuador created what it called a "humanitarian corridor" by laying on buses to take migrants through the country.

Venezuelan nationals travel by bus in southern Ecuador towards the border with Peru on August 24, 2018Image copyrightAFP
Image caption
Ecuador provided buses to take Venezuelans from the Colombian border to the Peruvian border
Peruvian Prime Minister César Villanueva said requiring Venezuelans to show their passport at the border did not mean that Peru was "closing the door" to migrants.

He said ID cards did not provide enough information and could easily be forged.

Map showing emigration routes

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On Friday, more than 2,500 crossed into the small Peruvian border town of Aguas Verdes, with thousands more trying to reach Peru at the main crossing point at Tumbes.
Many were exhausted by their journey.
"We have been on the road for five days. We travelled by bus and saw people, Venezuelans, walking along the road," Jonathan Zambrano, 18, told AFP news agency.

The Tumbes crossing has seen about 3,000 arrivals per day in recent weeks.
Peru is already home to about 400,000 Venezuelan migrants, most of whom arrived in the past year.

Grey line
Race to the border
By Katy Watson, BBC News, Huaquillas, on the Peru-Ecuador border

A Venezuelan migrant at the end of the line in Tumbes, northern Peru minutes after the clock turned midnight on Friday August 24, 2018Image copyrightAFP
Throughout Friday evening Venezuelans kept arriving, many in government-commandeered buses that had brought them from the Colombia-Ecuador border.
It was called a humanitarian corridor but, of course, it was one that was in Ecuador's interests, too. They didn't want to be left with stranded Venezuelans once midnight had passed.
With less than 10 minutes to go before the deadline, there were more than 100 people with no passports waiting in the queue hoping to be allowed into Peru.
Migration officials handed out a small pink ticket to those lining up. Those who were in the queue before midnight would be allowed to cross the border. Anyone else arriving after midnight would not.
A seemingly insignificant piece of paper but one that would define the future for these Venezuelans heading to Peru to find work.

Grey line

What has the UN said? ( BS Alert1 )
Joel Millman, a spokesman for the International Organization for Migration (IOM) - a UN agency - said increasing border restrictions coupled with an outbreak of violence on the Brazilian border last week, was an early warning sign that the region was in need of help.
"This is building to a crisis moment that we've seen in other parts of the world, particularly in the Mediterranean," he told reporters.
"A difficult situation can become a crisis situation very quickly and we have to be prepared," he added.
Chiara Cardoletti of the UN's refugee agency (UNHCR), said other countries in the region had welcomed Venezuelans and were helping to "avoid a situation like the one we have seen in Europe".


Media caption"This is the largest exodus Latin America has experienced" - UNHCR's Chiara Cardoletti

"What we are seeing is a continent that has opened its doors to people who are fleeing and who need support," she told the BBC.
Ms Cardoletti added that Colombia had registered more than 450,000 Venezuelans and given them regular status.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is to set up a special UN team to co-ordinate a regional response to the crisis, while Ecuador is to host a 13-nation regional summit in September.

How are other countries affected?
Ecuador brought in new passport regulations last week, leaving hundreds of migrants stranded on it border with Colombia.
However, on Friday, a judge found that requiring Venezuelans to carry valid passports broke regional agreements on freedom of movement.
Citizens of most South American nations can visit other South American nations without needing a visa or to carry a passport. The Andean Community trading bloc - which includes Ecuador and Peru - also allows visa- and passport-free travel for its citizens, although Venezuela withdrew from the grouping in 2006.

Twitter post by @katywatson: This is the immigration queue to get in to #Peru - from midnight, they won't let Venezuelans through if they don't have passports. Less than half an hour left - immigration officials expect lots of angry people who can't get stamped in time. #migrationcrisis #venezuela Image Copyright @katywatson@KATYWATSON

Report
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More than half a million Venezuelans have crossed into Ecuador this year alone and more than a million have entered Colombia in the past 15 months.
Brazil's northern state of Roraima has also had its attempt to close the border with Venezuela thrown out by a judge.
Violence erupted in the border town of Pacaraima last week when local residents attacked makeshift camps housing Venezuelan migrants.
The camps were burned down and the occupants temporarily fled back across the border.
Despite the violence, the number of Venezuelans crossing daily into Brazil has continued to rise.

What has Venezuela said?

The government took drastic measures to stabilise the economy last week, issuing new banknotes that slashed five zeros off the bolívar. Runaway inflation had been predicted to hit one million per cent by the end of the year.
On Friday, Venezuela's information minister Jorge Rodriguez said the measures would persuade those Venezuelans who had left to return.
"The conclusion is that Venezuelans are going to return and furthermore we invite them to return because we need them for this recovery plan," he told a news conference.

Economists have warned that the new measures do not address the root causes of inflation in Venezuela and that the printing of new notes could exacerbate inflation rather than curb it.

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Also: https://www.pinalcentral.com/world_news/venezuelan-migrants-pour-into-peru-before-new-rules-enforced/article_b72c27b5-76a0-5b33-baba-e4ab1b1f894e.html

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