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Colombia Tightens Border Controls as Venezuelan Exodus Grows

Colombia Tightens Border Controls as Venezuelan Exodus Grows

(Bloomberg) -- Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos announced a tightening of immigration controls as thousands of Venezuelans continue to pour over the border to escape a dire economic crisis and an increasingly authoritarian government.

Effective immediately, Colombia will cease to issue new migratory cards, which allow Venezuelans to cross the border freely without passing customs. Only existing card holders or those with valid passports will be able to enter Colombia, Santos said on Thursday in the frontier city of Cucuta, which has become a hub for migrants fleeing Venezuela.

“There will be more control and more security at borders,” Santos said, adding that 2,120 members of the Colombian military were being deployed to the area.

The two nations share a long, porous frontier that stretches over 1,300 miles from the Caribbean down through the Andes. For years, it has been common for residents to live in one country and work in another, but over recent months Colombia has struggled to cope with the influx of migrants as Venezuela’s economy collapses and President Nicolas Maduro cracks down on dissent.

On Saturday, Colombia opened its so-called Temporary Service Center on the outskirts of Cucuta. The facility, which provides food and lodging for 120 travelers for up to 48 hours, is administered by the Red Cross and the United Nations Migration Agency.

Almost 96,000 Venezuelans entered Colombia legally in November, more than double the amount in the same month of the previous year.

Brazil

Other Venezuelans have crossed the border with Brazil in recent years, with around 60,000 now living in Roraima state, according to local lawmakers.

On a trip to Boa Vista, the state capital, on Thursday Brazil’s defense minister, Raul Jungmann, said the government was studying ways of bolstering security on the border as well as the possibility of relocating some of the Venezuelan migrants, according to local media. Out of hours calls to the ministry of defense went unattended.

To contact the reporters on this story: Andrew Rosati in Caracas at arosati3@bloomberg.net, Oscar Medina in Bogota at omedinacruz@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Vivianne Rodrigues at vrodrigues3@bloomberg.net, Bruce Douglas

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