Venezuelans on Saturday took to dugout canoes to shop in Colombia as a government crackdown on smuggling and migrants cut off access to at least six border crossings key to the life of communities in both nations.
The going rate for a short river journey in the wooden canoes was less than one US dollar at Venezuela’s widely used black market exchange rate. Some of the about 50 people waiting to row across on Saturday under the eyes of Venezuelan soldiers were locals seeking to fill prescriptions for medicines hard to find in Venezuela.
The crossing between Boca del Grita and Puerto Santander in Colombia is among four additional checkpoints closed on Saturday by Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in the name of cleaning up smuggling and paramilitary activity on Venezuela’s western edge. The closures have choked off the tide of contraband goods that has been flowing from Venezuela — where products are heavily subsidized — to Colombia, where they can be sold at far higher prices. Venezuelan officials blame that smuggling for causing chronic shortages of key goods.
Photo: EPA
However, the closures have also disrupted lives in a region where many people routinely cross the border to work, shop and visit family. An estimated 5 million Colombians live in Venezuela, many of them dual nationals.
Venezuela’s military last week expelled hundreds of Colombians living in a shantytown officials said was a hotbed of smuggling, but has not repeated those raids in recent days.
However, many locals worry that mass deportations might be on the horizon. Officials estimate that 8,000 Colombians have fled or been deported from Venezuela since the crackdown began.
One of those waiting to cross the river on Saturday, Martha Restrepo, said she plans to move back to Colombia after living in Venezuela for 10 years without legal status.
“I’m going because I’m just fed up,” she said. “I came here 10 years ago to work, and I’m leaving now because of what Maduro’s been saying.”
The Red Cross has established emergency housing on the Colombian side of the border, where permanent shelters are already full to overflowing.
Venezuelan Vice President Jorge Arreaza visited one of the closed border crossings on Saturday and was assailed with complaints that the closure is affecting people’s ability to work.
“Colombians and Venezuelans live together here and we’re working to guarantee that everyone can live well from their work,” Arreaza said.
Maduro irked many Colombians on Friday when he performed one of their country’s traditional dances at a rally to support to border closures and expulsion of Colombians illegally in the country.
“We will not lend our dance to a tyrant,” said conservative former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe, who has long waged a war of words with Maduro and his mentor, the late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez.
On Friday, the UN expressed concern about possible human rights violations amid the crackdown, and the US Department of State urged Venezuela to pay attention to the “worsening humanitarian situation” along the border and refrain from deporting refugees.
The Organization of American States is scheduled to hold an emergency session tomorrow to discuss the situation and foreign ministers from South America are to meet on Thursday.
While business has all but ground to a halt in Colombian border towns, Venezuelans grappling with chronic shortages on their side said they have been cut off from supplies they had been finding in Colombia, including food, hardware and other basic supplies.
Lusidia Polanco on Saturday waited to cross the border so she could buy sanitary napkins and soap in Colombia.
“It’s a disaster here. You can’t find anything you need,” she said.
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