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There are 3 million Venezuelan refugees and migrants worldwide, U.N. says

ASSOCIATED PRESS / AUG. 31

Venezuelans illegally cross into Colombia, to Villa del Rosario, along a path known as a “trocha.” Uncontrolled by Venezuelan or Colombian authorities, the trochas are ruled by bands of armed men sporting rifles and dressed in fatigues. They charge migrants about $10 to be let through, frequently robbing or assaulting those who can’t pay. The U.N. refugee agency and the U.N. migration agency announced today that 2.4 million Venezuelan refugees and migrants are in Latin America and the Caribbean, and the rest are in other regions worldwide.

UNITED NATIONS >> The number of refugees and migrants from Venezuela has risen to 3 million worldwide, the United Nations said today.

The U.N. refugee agency and the U.N. migration agency said 2.4 million Venezuelan refugees and migrants are in Latin America and the Caribbean and the rest are in other regions.

Citing data from national immigration authorities and other sources, the agencies said Colombia has the highest number of refugees and migrants from Venezuela, with over 1 million. Peru is next with over 500,000. Ecuador has over 220,000, Argentina 130,000, Chile over 100,000, Panama 94,000, and Brazil 85,000, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees and the International Organization for Migration said.

Eduardo Stein, joint special representative for the two agencies on the Venezuelan issue, said, “Countries in Latin America and the Caribbean have largely maintained a commendable open door policy to refugees and migrants from Venezuela.”

But he warned that “their reception capacity is severely strained, requiring a more robust and immediate response from the international community if this generosity and solidarity are to continue.”

Governments from the region met in Ecuador in September and are scheduled to hold a second meeting Nov. 22-23.

Most migrants say they are fleeing Venezuela’s imploding economy. Venezuela was once among Latin America’s most prosperous nations, and it has the world’s largest proven oil reserves, but a fall in oil prices accompanied by corruption and mismanagement under two decades of socialist rule have left the economy in economic and political crisis. Inflation this year could top 1 million percent, according to economists at the International Monetary Fund.

The government denies there is a migrant crisis and President Nicolas Maduro has urged his country’s emigres to “stop cleaning toilets abroad” and return home.

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