Skip to main content

A number of local organisations have banded together to provide aid to Venezuelans who are seeking refuge here from the crisis in their country.

A press release from the support group follows:

 

Seven civic and faith-based organizations have launched the Venezuela Support Group (VSG) to provide advice and assistance to Venezuelans seeking refuge from the deprivations and insecurity currently gripping their homeland.  In pursuit of this aim the VSG have requested meetings with the Minister of Citizenship in order to brief the Ministry of the VSG aims and to establish liaison arrangements with the Ministry.

Member organizations of the VSG have previously publicly expressed their concerns about the humanitarian aspect of the on-going crisis in Venezuela in press releases, panel discussions and in communications with various Ministries. Concerns of the grouping have been shaped by the following considerations:

  • Distinguishing humanitarian obligations to the Venezuelan people from political factors that currently influence both the internal crisis in Venezuela and Caricom Secretariat’s reluctance to date to formulate specific advice to member States on how to respond to that crisis.
  • Devising a flexible, evidence-based rather than speculative response appropriate to the relatively small numbers of Venezuelans currently in Guyana.
  • Respecting the fact that Venezuelans in Guyana have documented their wish not to seek formal refugee status but to seek temporary renewable visas that allow them to earn money while in Guyana.  

 

The initial focus of the VSG will be on ensuring that persons arriving receive information and assistance to secure valid visas to remain in Guyana and are not exploited financially or abused in other ways. 

 

We have recently learnt that some consideration has been given to permit Venezuelans in Guyana to regularize their situation on the basis of possession of an ID card rather than a passport. Although, to date, there has been no formal announcement by the Government of Guyana on the matter, we welcome this development in general as protecting Venezuelans against exposure to detention, fines and deportation. Moreover, this step would also align Guyana with the recent appeal made by the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) for neighbouring countries to adopt flexible arrangements of this nature.

 

The VSG is currently in the process of establishing offices made available by the Catholic  Church in the compound opposite the Catholic Cathedral on Brickdam. The work of the SVG is being supported in the initial phase by  the UNHCR which is in the process of establishing a permanent presence in Guyana.

The VSG group will support the smooth implementation of any new regulations and related policy guidelines through the following activities:

  • Ensuring the regulations and the accompanying procedures are known to arriving Venezuelans.
  • Providing advice and, where necessary, accompaniment, in the process of regularizing their presence in Guyana.
  • Supporting Venezuelans in need of assistance to contact family or other persons.
  • Making known social and welfare services which may be accessible to Venezuelans with special needs.
  • Contributing to information-gathering initiatives, especially in interior communities.
  • Providing opportunities for Venezuelans to communicate with other Venezuelans.

Safeguarding the specifically humanitarian character of this response is a high priority for the SVG, in particular, insulating it from attempts to politicize it or from any association with the border issue. The SVG will also serve as a focal point through which displaced persons or families can communicate with each other.  

The founding members of the SVG are:

  • Amerindian Peoples Association (APA)
  • Guyana Human Rights Association (GHRA)
  • Guyana Institute for Transparency Inc. (GITI)
  • Moray House Trust
  • Policy Forum Guyana
  • Red Thread
  • Roman Catholic Diocese of Guyana
  • Ursuline Sisters in Guyana

https://www.stabroeknews.com/2...lans-seeking-refuge/

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Prashad posted:

Those people will be on the voters list for the next election. We all know who they will be voting for.

I don't think you ever come face to face with humanitarian crises that faces many nations today. Recently, over forty Africans stranded in the Sahara desert on their way to Europe. Can you imagine someone dies from thirst on a scorched desert? These are families with children hoping to seek new life somewhere else that can accept them. Your concern is the lease on these people's mind. 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Prince posted:
Prashad posted:

Those people will be on the voters list for the next election. We all know who they will be voting for.

I don't think you ever come face to face with humanitarian crises that faces many nations today. Recently, over forty Africans stranded in the Sahara desert on their way to Europe. Can you imagine someone dies from thirst on a scorched desert? These are families with children hoping to seek new life somewhere else that can accept them. Your concern is the lease on these people's mind. 

Have you? When?

FM
skeldon_man posted:
Prince posted:
Prashad posted:

Those people will be on the voters list for the next election. We all know who they will be voting for.

I don't think you ever come face to face with humanitarian crises that faces many nations today. Recently, over forty Africans stranded in the Sahara desert on their way to Europe. Can you imagine someone dies from thirst on a scorched desert? These are families with children hoping to seek new life somewhere else that can accept them. Your concern is the lease on these people's mind. 

Have you? When?

Pay attention to the Venezuelans crises and don't worry about me. I respond according to poster's views on the issue. 

FM
Prince posted:
Prashad posted:

Those people will be on the voters list for the next election. We all know who they will be voting for.

I don't think you ever come face to face with humanitarian crises that faces many nations today. Recently, over forty Africans stranded in the Sahara desert on their way to Europe. Can you imagine someone dies from thirst on a scorched desert? These are families with children hoping to seek new life somewhere else that can accept them. Your concern is the lease on these people's mind. 

What are you doing to help the Africans in the desert?  Standing on Liberty Avenue and shouting to the skies wouldn't be of much help.  You have to step up your game.

Bibi Haniffa
Bibi Haniffa posted:
Prince posted:
Prashad posted:

Those people will be on the voters list for the next election. We all know who they will be voting for.

I don't think you ever come face to face with humanitarian crises that faces many nations today. Recently, over forty Africans stranded in the Sahara desert on their way to Europe. Can you imagine someone dies from thirst on a scorched desert? These are families with children hoping to seek new life somewhere else that can accept them. Your concern is the lease on these people's mind. 

What are you doing to help the Africans in the desert?  Standing on Liberty Avenue and shouting to the skies wouldn't be of much help.  You have to step up your game.

It seems that you are taking my comments personally regardless if it's directed at you or someone else. GNI is a discussion forum, not a forum for humanitarian preparedness. You are trolling on the impossibilities, knowing that you and I couldn't have done anything for the perished African, but we can use their demise to educate ourselves on human struggle and sacrifice in difficult situations. I am not in competition with no one rather than to make logical points on issues that don't seem to escape human involvement. That said, Guyana should reach out humanely to the Venezuelans as much as they can. 

However, You should tell us why you are here, Bibi.  

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×