Chile, Peru discuss safe passage for stranded migrants
Stranded for five days under the scorching desert sun alongside a highway, Venezuelan Rosmary Morales looks on helplessly at a wall of police officers blocking her passage into Peru
Stranded for five days under the scorching desert sun alongside a highway, Venezuelan Rosmary Morales looked on helplessly Friday at a wall of police officers blocking her passage into Peru.
The 45-year-old waits alongside hundreds of others who have set up a makeshift refugee camp near the border they canāt cross because they lack the proper documentation. āThere isnāt even an awning,ā Morales said, adding she felt she was being treated ālike a dog.ā
Morales is among the Venezuelans, Colombians and Haitians stranded for two weeks along the Chile-Peru border, eager to return home as living costs skyrocket and as lawmakers in both countries propose penalties for undocumented migration.
Political leaders, meanwhile, are discussing how to facilitate their passage through Peru at a time when migrants increasingly are being blamed for rising crime on both sides of the border.
Chile said Friday it would start registering all the undocumented migrants who want to leave the country, and Peru started letting some of them through to its border offices.
Morales says that while sheās grateful that Chile took her in when she left Venezuela, sheās now ready to go back to her native country because the cost of living has risen, jobs have become scarce and sheās finding it difficult to survive without the proper documentation, which she says has been impossible to obtain.
āWe can no longer make ends meet,ā Morales said.
Now she and others are having to endure the elements at the Atacama Desert, one of the driest on the planet, with heat during the day and cold at night.
āMany mothers are there, with children, with the flu, fever, constant vomiting, dehydrated, unable to eat a good lunch, unable to bathe,ā Morales said.
Chileās acting interior minister, Manuel Monsalve, said Friday the government will set up registration points in the border region to enroll undocumented migrants who want to leave the country so ātheir fingerprint, face and name can be recorded.ā
Monsalve said Chile wants to let the migrants āreturn to their countryā but also noted itās the governmentās responsibility to ensure that āpeople who have committed crimes are not leaving Chile.ā
The president of Chile's lower house of Congress, Vlado Mirosevic, had proposed Thursday that a āhumanitarian corridorā be created to allow the migrants to return home, without elaborating on details of such a corridor.
Peruvian Interior Minister Vicente Romero said on Friday on local radio RPP that āat the level of the foreign ministry, we are working with Chile, Ecuador, and also with Venezuelaā to find a way for migrants to cross borders without problems.
āThe important thing is to provide the necessary security to all foreigners who voluntarily wish to return to their country,ā Romero said.
Romero, who has been in the Peruvian border region with Chile since Thursday night, added that he met with local authorities to consider opening ātemporary sheltersā for people waiting to leave.
Migrants have set up improvised tents with blankets and braved the elements without access to running water and other basic services. Others have found help in the nearby Chilean border complex of Chacalluta.
āWe want to go back to our country, Venezuela. Weāve achieved what we came to do in Chile," Omar DomĆnguez, 47, said at the border. āWe don't want to stay in Peru."
According to official figures from Chilean prosecutors, approximately 10,000 undocumented immigrants have entered Chile this year, and an additional 1,194 have requested to leave.
The crisis along the border comes at a time when officials in Chile are increasing controls on undocumented migrants. Earlier this month, Chile's National Prosecutorās Office called on prosecutors to request preventive detention for anyone caught committing a crime who could not prove their identity.
In both Peru and Chile, lawmakers are seeking to toughen laws against undocumented migrants.
A measure set to be debated in Chileās lower house of Congress would classify undocumented immigration as a crime and proposes jail sentences up to 18 months for anyone caught entering Chile through unofficial channels.
In Peru, a lawmaker from the Somos PerĆŗ party proposed a bill Thursday to imprison migrants who enter the country illegally for up to 10 years. A lawmaker from the far-right Renovación Popular said Peruās border patrol should enjoy legal protections so they can āshootā migrants if necessary.
Peruvian President Dina Boluarte attributed ācriminal actsā to migrants earlier this week. ----- Associated Press journalists Franklin BriceƱo in Lima, Peru and Eva Vergara in Santiago, Chile contributed to this report.