Venezuelans stream home from Colombia due to virus pandemic

940

BOGOTA, April 6, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Hundreds of Venezuelans who fled to
neighboring Colombia during their country’s economic crisis are now returning
home, pushed by the deadly novel coronavirus and Colombia’s own pandemic
woes.

Colombian migration officials said Sunday that 600 people — including 35
children and 167 women — crossed the main border point at the Simon Bolivar
International Bridge in the northeastern city of Cucuta, into Venezuela one
day earlier.

Another group of 160 departed Bogota on their way back home on Sunday,
officials said.

Although the border is officially closed as a measure taken to halt the
spread of the novel coronavirus, Colombia has opened a “humanitarian
corridor” to allow Venezuelans to return home.

Colombian agents on Sunday were on hand to make sure that those departing
Bogota “were voluntarily returning” to Venezuela, an official at the
immigration office told AFP.

In recent years Colombia has welcomed 1.8 million Venezuelans fleeing their
country’s economic and political collapse.

According to the United Nations, 4.9 million Venezuelans have fled their
country, mainly to other South American nations, and many need international
aid due to the economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic.

Before crossing the international bridge into Venezuela, Colombian police
took the temperature of the departing migrants to make sure no one could be
infected with the virus, and sprayed those wearing face masks with a
disinfectant.

“We’re afraid because we don’t know if over there we could face the
coronavirus. We don’t have medicine to fight that, because in reality in
Venezuela you can’t find anything,” a Venezuelan returning home named
Alexander Colmenares told AFP.

The head of Colombia’s immigration service, Juan Francisco Espinosa, told
reporters that Venezuelans who fled to places like Ecuador and Peru often on
foot, are now also returning to their home country.

More than 1,400 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Colombia since
March 6, including 35 deaths.