There's A 'MAJOR' Crisis In Venezuela That No One's Talking About. (MAJOR POVERTY & FOOD SCARCE)

SirReginald

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TLDR
  • Growing numbers are fleeing economic meltdown and political turmoil in Venezuela, where people scrounge for food and other necessities of daily life
  • Officials from Colombia, Ecuador and Peru will meet in Bogota next week to seek a way forward
  • Peru this month tightened entry rules for Venezuelans, requiring them to carry passports instead of just national ID cards
  • Venezuela on Monday cut five zeros from prices and pegged the country's currency to an obscure state-backed cryptocurrency
  • Critics slammed the plan as inadequate in the face of inflation that topped 82,000 percent in July and is expected to reach 1 million percent this year

By REUTERS

PUBLISHED: 19:49 EDT, 25 August 2018 | UPDATED: 22:24 EDT, 25 August 2018

The exodus of migrants from Venezuela is building toward a 'crisis moment' comparable to events involving refugees in the Mediterranean, the United Nationsmigration agency said on Friday.

Growing numbers are fleeing economic meltdown and political turmoil in Venezuela, where people scrounge for food and other necessities of daily life, threatening to overwhelm neighboring countries.

Officials from Colombia, Ecuador and Peru will meet in Bogota next week to seek a way forward.

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Growing numbers are fleeing economic meltdown and political turmoil in Venezuela, where people scrounge for food and other necessities of daily life

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Officials from Colombia, Ecuador and Peru will meet in Bogota next week to seek a way forward

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Venezuelan migrants on their way to Peru sleep along the Pan-American Highway between Tulcan and Ibarra in Ecuador

In Brazil, rioters this month drove hundreds back over the border. Peru this month tightened entry rules for Venezuelans, requiring them to carry passports instead of just national ID cards, though a judge in Ecuador on Friday rolled back a similar rule enacted there.

Describing those events as early warning signs, a spokesman for the International Organization for Migration (IOM), Joel Millman, said funding and means of managing the outflow must be mobilized.

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Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela's president, attends a 'Vow of Loyalty' event at the Ministry of Defense in Caracas, Venezuela, on Thursday, May 24, 2018

'This is building to a crisis moment that we've seen in other parts of the world, particularly in the Mediterranean,' he told a news briefing.

On Thursday, the IOM and U.N. refugee agency UNHCR called on Latin American countries to ease entry for Venezuelans, more than 1.6 million of whom have left since 2015.

Peru's top immigration official, Eduardo Sevilla, said Peru will exempt some Venezuelans from the passport requirement, including parents with children seeking to join the rest of their family, pregnant women and the gravely ill.

But Sevilla said authorities would also be vigilant of attempts to evade the new rule by claiming refugee status.

'Is UNHCR going to take responsibility if that person commits a crime?' Sevilla said to Reuters on Friday. 'Our priority is to contribute to security and internal order by clearly identifying people.'

UNHCR spokesman Andrej Mahecic said on Friday that governments had made 'commendable' efforts even though some reception capacities and services were overwhelmed.

But he said 'some disturbing images' had emerged from the region in the past week that risked stigmatizing Venezuelans who had fled and complicating efforts to integrate them.

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Venezuela on Monday cut five zeros from prices and pegged the country's currency to an obscure state-backed cryptocurrency

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Venezuelan migrants embrace at the bus terminal in the north of Lima on August 25, 2018, after a 20-hour trip from Tumbes, northwestern Peru

An Ecuadorean judge, Judith Naranjo, on Friday lifted an order requiring that Venezuelans hold passports to be allowed entry, in response to a lawsuit filed by Ecuador's state ombudsman together with local human rights groups.

'The judge accepted the request for the precautionary measures requested by the ombudsman,' the agency wrote on Twitter.

The ruling gives the government 45 days to develop a plan to address the situation of Venezuelan migrants.

Venezuela's information minister, Jorge Rodriguez, said on Friday that a new package of economic measures meant to address hyperinflation would win over Venezuelans who had left the country.

Venezuela on Monday cut five zeros from prices and pegged the country's currency to an obscure state-backed cryptocurrency.

Critics slammed the plan as inadequate in the face of inflation that topped 82,000 percent in July and is expected to reach 1 million percent this year.

'The conclusion is that Venezuelans are going to return and furthermore we invite them to return because we need them for this recovery plan,' Rodriguez told a news conference.

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Inflation hitting the The Venezuelan bolivar (pictured) topped 82,000 percent in July and is expected to reach 1 million percent this year

More than 1 million people flee Venezuela amid political crisis | Daily Mail Online


Besides the Trump caping which I'm STRONGLY AGAINST, she makes good points as she's Venezuelan herself.



 

SirReginald

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Afro-Venezuelans

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Because until 2011 Venezuela had not collected data on its black population since 1920, have estimates ranged from 7 to 60 per cent of the total population. While the 2011 census allowed community members to self-identify for the first time, the reported figures – 0.7 per cent of the total population identified themselves as Afro-descendant and 2.9 per cent as black, compared to 51.6 per cent as brown and 43.6 per cent as white – were far lower than the likely actual proportion.

Afro-Venezuelans have traditionally lived in the rural coastal zones of the country, but have begun to migrate to urban centres like Caracas in large numbers. Although Afro-Venezuelans have contributed to and are largely assimilated into mainstream Venezuelan or Creole culture, this population has still retained some of its own cultural heritage. The use of traditional drums in Afro-Venezuelan music, as well as dance and African-based spirituality demonstrate this.

Historical context
Enslaved Africans were transported to Venezuela mostly in the eighteenth century to work on the numerous cocoa plantations. Despite proposals by Simón Bolívar, ‘The Liberator’, slavery was not abolished upon independence in 1811, but rather some forty years later with the Law of Abolition of Slavery of 1854. By that time the enslaved population had substantially declined due both to economic factors and the common practice of manumission.

Current issues
Historically, urban and rural Afro-Venezuelans have not identified themselves in ethnic terms, but rather according to their class and geographic position. This may be due to a general lack of consciousness, but may also be an explicit denial of blackness because it is devalued in this society. Due to increased mobilization by local NGOs, Afro-Venezuelans, and youth in particular, are beginning to reaffirm their identity and culture.

Despite the existence of some notable Afro-Venezuelans in high-level positions in the government and private sector, Afro-Venezuelans continue to be the victims of discrimination and racial prejudice. This discrimination can be especially violent in poorer areas where police forces still often act with impunity and racial profiling is rampant. Moreover, nearly 40 per cent of Venezuelans live under the poverty line and the concentration of people of African descent in poorer regions and neighbourhoods suggest that poverty rates are higher among this population.

Furthermore, the community struggles for acceptance and recognition: many Venezuelans do not regard Afro-Venezuelans as a distinct group and the government still has no official data on their numbers. However, music and other cultural forms of expression have helped the community gain some visibility in recent years. An important milestone for the community came in 2011 when for the first time the community were able to self-identify as Afro-descendant in the national census. Until then, there had been no official classification for the community.

Updated December 2017

Afro-Venezuelans - Minority Rights Group
 

Deuterion

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Venezuela is basically a narco state at the moment.

But people just love blaming the USA for this.

Nah...this one ain't on us. Venezuela has some serious problems they need to fix internally.

Mmmm...the US placed crippling sanctions on Venezuela after Hugo Chavez nationalized their industries...yes this is on the USA. They don’t allow countries of brown people to own and control their own resources.
 

Booker T Garvey

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This has been going on for a while, complete media blackout in the era of Trump

with that said, one of my coworkers had a friend just leave there like a month ago - said he didn't see shyt; didn't even know any of this was going on :russ:

they've got their tourist game on lock though, they ain't about to fukk up that dwight mann money :usure:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Mmmm...the US placed crippling sanctions on Venezuela after Hugo Chavez nationalized their industries...yes this is on the USA. They don’t allow countries of brown people to own and control their own resources.
BULLSHÏT

Some of yall just love doing the "omg usa is bad" schtick all the damn time

As if Russia doesn't have an interest in this little shyt show either. Or China.

Venezuela is a narco state washing money for Hezbollah.

A suspected terrorist and drug trafficker just became Venezuela's vice president

In Venezuela’s Toxic Brew, Failed Narco-State Meets Iran-Backed Terrorism


The goddamn Vice President of the whole country is a drug kingpin

Tareck El Aissami - Wikipedia

We have testimony from people who turned snitch who proved this

U.S. Imposes Sanctions on Venezuela’s Vice President, Calling Him a Drug ‘Kingpin’

How a Politician Accused of Drug Trafficking Became Venezuela’s Vice President
 
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