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Spain PM Sanchez calls for Venezuelan migrant quotas

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Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Thursday that Latin America should adopt a "quota system" to better manage the Venezuelan migrant crisis.

Sanchez was speaking on a trip to Colombia, which has been inundated with hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans fleeing economic meltdown in their homeland.

"If we think of Latin America as a supportive community, it's clear that a quota system could be a good solution," Sanchez told Blu Radio.

The socialist PM said it's a similar deal to that which Spain is proposing in the European Union in the face of mass migration from Africa in particular.

Last month, the EU's border agency warned that Spain is developing into the chief path for migrants trying to enter Europe.

"This is a challenge affecting not just Spain, which is logically the border, but the whole European Union and that's why we need solidarity amongst all member states," said Sanchez during a two-day visit to Colombia, in which he met with President Ivan Duque, an ardent critic of Venezuela counterpart Nicolas Maduro.

In 2015 the EU came up with a quota plan to distribute migrants after more than a million arrived by sea as civil war in Syria saw numbers surge.

But many countries dragged their feet in agreeing to take in their quotas, while the likes of Hungary and Poland refused outright to accept refugees.

Some 1.6 million Venezuelans have fled the country since 2015 as four years of recession and hyperinflation the International Monetary Fund predicts will reach one million percent this year have left large swathes of the population in poverty.

And this in a country that in the past welcomed many migrants fleeing authoritarian regimes elsewhere.

"Venezuela was a place that welcomed many Spaniards, Galicians, Canary Islanders... during the Francoist dictatorship," said Sanchez, referring to the 36-year reign of Francisco Franco from 1939 to 1975.

"The lived and prospered there. So we're a country with great solidarity. We feel very close to this drama that Venezuela is going through so we hope that Venezuelans will open a dialogue."

Some 2.3 million Venezuelans live outside the country of 30.6 million, according to the UN, with the numbers heading to Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Argentina and Brazil steadily increasing.

Venezuela's far-left authorities have dismissed the claims of economic crisis as fake news and a "right-wing plot," blaming the country's troubles on United States and EU led sanctions.

Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Thursday that Latin America should adopt a “quota system” to better manage the Venezuelan migrant crisis.

Sanchez was speaking on a trip to Colombia, which has been inundated with hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans fleeing economic meltdown in their homeland.

“If we think of Latin America as a supportive community, it’s clear that a quota system could be a good solution,” Sanchez told Blu Radio.

The socialist PM said it’s a similar deal to that which Spain is proposing in the European Union in the face of mass migration from Africa in particular.

Last month, the EU’s border agency warned that Spain is developing into the chief path for migrants trying to enter Europe.

“This is a challenge affecting not just Spain, which is logically the border, but the whole European Union and that’s why we need solidarity amongst all member states,” said Sanchez during a two-day visit to Colombia, in which he met with President Ivan Duque, an ardent critic of Venezuela counterpart Nicolas Maduro.

In 2015 the EU came up with a quota plan to distribute migrants after more than a million arrived by sea as civil war in Syria saw numbers surge.

But many countries dragged their feet in agreeing to take in their quotas, while the likes of Hungary and Poland refused outright to accept refugees.

Some 1.6 million Venezuelans have fled the country since 2015 as four years of recession and hyperinflation the International Monetary Fund predicts will reach one million percent this year have left large swathes of the population in poverty.

And this in a country that in the past welcomed many migrants fleeing authoritarian regimes elsewhere.

“Venezuela was a place that welcomed many Spaniards, Galicians, Canary Islanders… during the Francoist dictatorship,” said Sanchez, referring to the 36-year reign of Francisco Franco from 1939 to 1975.

“The lived and prospered there. So we’re a country with great solidarity. We feel very close to this drama that Venezuela is going through so we hope that Venezuelans will open a dialogue.”

Some 2.3 million Venezuelans live outside the country of 30.6 million, according to the UN, with the numbers heading to Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Argentina and Brazil steadily increasing.

Venezuela’s far-left authorities have dismissed the claims of economic crisis as fake news and a “right-wing plot,” blaming the country’s troubles on United States and EU led sanctions.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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