News
| Feb 8, 2021

Colombia to give temporary protective status to Venezuelan migrants

/ Our Today

administrator
Reading Time: 2 minutes
Colombia’s President Ivan Duque speaks during the announcement of the granting of legal status of temporary protection to all Venezuelan migrants, in Bogota, Colombia February 8, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez)

BOGOTA (Reuters)

Colombia will give temporary protective legal status to Venezuelan migrants, President Ivan Duque said on Monday in a joint announcement with United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi.

The status will allow the migrants to work legally in Colombia.

Colombia has been the top destination for people fleeing economic and social collapse in neighboring Venezuela. Some 966,000 of the 1.73 million Venezuelan migrants living in Colombia do not currently have legal status.

“We need to take action,” Duque said during a press announcement. “This process marks a milestone in Colombia’s migration policies.”

The UN’s Grandi called the announcement “historic” and said it was the most important humanitarian gesture in the region for decades.

PUBLIC HEALTH, EDUCATION SYSTEMS OVERBURDENED

The migrant influx has overburdened Colombia’s fragile public health and education systems, especially in border areas.

The new status – which will last 10 years – will free those who are already legalised from regularly having to reapply for permissions, Duque said.

In addition, migrants with irregular status who entered Colombia before January 31 are eligible along with migrants who legally enter Colombia during the first two years of the new measures.

Anyone who does not register under the new temporary status will eventually be subject to deportation, Duque added.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Filippo Grandi speaks during the announcement of the granting of legal status of temporary protection to Venezuelan migrants, in Bogota, Colombia February 8, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez)

Duque reiterated a call for the international community to increase funding for the crisis, asking for help to vaccinate migrants against COVID-19.

The Venezuelan population in Colombia fell more than two per cent last year, as tens of thousands returned home in desperation during over five months of coronavirus lockdown that shuttered many parts of the economy.

But Colombian authorities predict many are likely to return as the economy recovers, bringing with them one or two additional migrants.

Colombia said last month it will keep its land and river borders closed until March 1 in a bid to curb spread of coronavirus. International and domestic air travel is open.

Comments

What To Read Next

News JAM May 13, 2025

Reading Time: < 1 minuteThe Ministry of Education, Skills, Youth and Information is assuring the public that all necessary steps are being taken to support the continuation of teaching and learning at Horace Clarke High School following a break-in and vandalism of the school campus on the night of Saturday, May 10.
 
The break-in, which is now the subject of an active police investigation, resulted in the ransacking of several key areas of the institution, including the tuck shop, administrative offices, staff room, and several classrooms.