Every day, thousands of Venezuelans leave their country in search of safety and stability, many of them arriving in Colombia. The 探花精选 has been supporting families in need in C煤cuta, a border city, since April 2018. Recently, the 探花精选 conducted an assessment across the country, and spoke to families to understand their needs. Here is what you need to know about the unfolding crisis.

What is happening in Venezuela?

Venezuela was once the wealthiest nation in Latin America, the beneficiary of the world's largest oil reserves. In 2014, the economy began to collapse. The Bolivar, its currency, has gone into free fall, leaving millions unable to afford even basic necessities. According to , a cup of coffee today costs the same as 1,800 cups in January 2018. Both food and health care are increasingly hard to come by as supplies dwindle and costs for services skyrocket. Families face a desperate decision: struggle to get by and suffer extreme hunger, or leave the country.

How many people have left Venezuela, and where have they gone?

According the U.N., more than three million people have left Venezuela since the crisis began. One million of those, many lacking official documentation, have gone to neighboring Colombia. Hundreds of thousands more have traveled to Brazil, Peru or Ecuador. It鈥檚 expected that these numbers will increase as the crisis deepens; by the end of 2019, there could be two million Venezuelans in Colombia.

It doesn鈥檛 matter if you have a lot of material things if you don鈥檛 have medicine or food.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really hard,鈥 says Meli Rondon, who lives with her sons and grandchildren in an informal roadside camp in the Colombian city of Barranquilla. 鈥淚n Venezuela, we have our own home, our own beds, but it doesn鈥檛 matter if you have a lot of material things if you don鈥檛 have medicine or food.鈥 

52-year-old chef and grandmother Meli Rondon sits inside a tent with members of her family and their dog, Beethoven
Meli Rondon (left), a chef from Venezuela, now lives by a roadside in Barranquilla, Colombia, with her family. The children sleep inside the tent while the adults sleep out in the open.
Photo: Jessica Wanless/探花精选

Why are people leaving Venezuela?

鈥淚 decided I had to leave Venezuela for my baby,鈥 reports Carina, a mother of two living in Bogota. 鈥淪he had malnutrition. She was losing all of her calcium. She lost her fingernails.鈥 

Most Venezuelans leave the country looking for a place where they will be safe and free from hunger. Many seek work to earn cash to send home. Others plan to join family who have already traveled to Colombia and beyond. 

Carina plays with her daughter Kimberly in her lap.
The economic crisis forced Carina to take her malnourished baby girl to Colombia. 鈥淲hen we got here to Bogota people helped us with what we needed. Now my daughter is getting much better."
Photo: Jessica Wanless/探花精选

What is life like for Venezuelans who remain in the country?

Supermarket shelves are often empty and people have reported scavenging for discarded food. Angie*, a mother who left for Colombia, told the 探花精选 that, 鈥淲hen my grandma died, we had to bury the body in the garden, because we did not have any money to pay for the funeral.鈥 

Electricity is often unreliable, outages alternating with power surges damaging refrigerators and other appliances. Violence has increased as people grow desperate to provide for their children鈥攐r simply to survive.

Angie, four months pregnant, sits outside her tent under a tree in Baranquilla.
The crisis has left families without enough cash for critical expenses. 鈥淲hen my grandma died, we had to bury the body in the garden," says Angie, who is four months pregnant and living in a tent in Barranquilla.
Photo: Jessica Wanless/探花精选

Health care is scarce. Patients needing an operation often have to pay for for their own medical supplies, right down to the rubber gloves used by the surgeon. Many medicines and treatments are no longer available in Venezuela. 鈥淭wo weeks ago, one of my nephews died of leukemia,鈥 says Carina. 鈥淗e was 12 years old. He died because there was no treatment.鈥 

What is life like for Venezuelans in Colombia?

鈥淟ife here in Colombia is difficult,鈥 reports Karina Gutierrez, a 42-year-old mother of three. Karina and her husband are struggling to find steady work, a common occurrence. Like many Venezuelan families, they are living in a shared apartment. 鈥淭he rent here is really expensive, so living with other people is the only way to be able to pay all of the rent,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e met the couple here.鈥

Life here in Colombia is difficult. The rent here is really expensive.

But there is hope. Karina鈥檚 10-year-old daughter, Geicelis, is going to school. 鈥淪chool here is more difficult than in Venezuela because they teach us a lot more things,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut it is easier in a lot of ways because, back in Venezuela, it was difficult to get the notebooks and other things that I needed. Often the teachers were not there to teach us.鈥 Adds Geicelis, 鈥淚 have a lot of Colombian friends at school now.鈥

Karina with her 10-year-old daughter Geicelis
Karina tries to make ends meet selling drinks and baby wipes to passing motorists in Barranquilla. Her 10-year-old daughter Geicelis has started school, where she's made both Venezuelan and Colombian friends.
Photo: Jessica Wanless/探花精选

What is the 探花精选 doing to help?

Since April 2018, the 探花精选 has been working in C煤cuta supporting Venezuelans and vulnerable Colombians with specialized services for women and children, cash assistance, and health care. In the coming months, the 探花精选 will be expanding its work across Colombia

To date, the 探花精选 has reached over 5,000 people in Colombia, including Cibel, a new mother who is receiving cash, attending parenting classes and receiving medical care. 鈥淭he 探花精选 makes me feel like I am not alone,鈥 says Cibel, who is naming her newborn after Diana, a staff member with the local 探花精选 team. 鈥淭hey are the only ones I have counted on.鈥

*Name changed to protect privacy