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The immigrants return to Venezuela face debts and difficult living conditions

Maracaibo, Venezuela (AP) – The hands of Yosbin Pérez has made tens of thousands of aluminum characters around Veneuzuelan families every day to cook arepas. He is deeply proud by making a “Veromo,” a common Denometor between the crashed home and the city apartments, but they are not in his name despite the Cokware.

In fact, in Pérez, who owes $ 5,000 because he and his family have never traveled to the United States, they hoped to escape from Venezuela, social and economic disasters. Now, like thousands of Venezeelen return voluntarily or otherwise returned to their homeland this year, starting to be done as difficulty increases.

“When I decided to travel in August, I sold everything: House, property, car, sand, sand. I was left empty,” Phanneel said. “We arrived in Mexico, we stayed there for seven months, and when the President (Donald Trump) came into power in January, saying, ‘Let’s go!'” Let’s go! ‘”

He, his husband and five children returned to their South America country in March.

Covit-19 epidemic pushes migrants in the US

More than 7.7 million of Venezuelans are delayed from 2013, where their economy relies on their country failed. Many have stable in Latin America and Caribbean, but after Covil-19 epidemics, migrants see in the US as their best opportunity to improve their lives.

Many Nininezuelans enter the US under programs that allowed them to get work permits and protect them from talking. But from January, the White House had completed immigration and demanded their dismissal as US President Donald Trump to reduce the migration to the US

Venezuela President Nicoluru Maduro had already declined to return final Venezuese but changed the course at the beginning of this year under pressure from the White House. The immigrants now arrive at the airport outside the capital, caracas, plane used by US government contractor or ventela managed by the government government.

The US government has avoided their boldly, including sending more than 200 Venezuela in Salvador Prison for four months, opposed that most immigrants were a Tren de Aragian violence. Managers do not provide proof of support. However, many new migrants have just been exiled and they are inappropriate to their tattoos and use them as an excuse for expelling them.

Maduro announced the “economic emergencies”

Most of those returning home, such as Pérez and his family, found world conditions than the demands of money, a decline in encouraging characters and other necessities, have sold a car, home and electronic retirement before migrating. The monthly monthly income of 130 bolivars, or $ 1.02 from Monday, does not come up from Venezuela since 2022. People have two, three or more jobs to be combined.

This recent chapters in a 12-year chapter until we encouraged Maduro to announce the “economic emergency” in April.

David Rodriguez emigrated Colombia and Peru before he decided to get in Tenezuela last year, crossed the Central America and traveled by train and traveled on Mexico over Mexico over Mexico. He turned himself over to our exiles in December, but he was arrested for 15 days and was exiled to Mexico.

Rodriguez 33-year-old Rodriguez served as a Motexaxi driver Mexico City until he saved enough money to buy his flight ticket back in Venezuela in March. March.

“Going to the United States … It was completely back,” he said while sitting at a relative home in Caracas. “Currently, I don’t know what to do without getting out of debt first.”

He must pay $ 50 on a week on a motorcycle and buy a mayotaxi driver. In a beautiful church, he said, could get some $ 150, but there are others when he is doing enough to meet $ 50 pay.

Migrants want loan sharks

Some migrants are enrolled in beauty schools and cake schools or becoming food drivers after being dismissed. Some have already moved to Spain. Many want a loan.

Pérez’s Dianum, who has also made Aluminum Coakware before migration last year, perpetrating her and other machines left home in Maracaibo to live. But the majority of the money received will cover up to 40% of the $ 1,000 loan.

If the debt was inadequate concern, Pérez should be concerned about the exact reason they fired them: robbery.

Upérez said he and his family fled Maracaibo after spending hours in police cell on June 2024 for refusing to pay Officer $ 1,000. Officer, Pérez said, knocked on his door and demanded money to allow him to continue using his unplanned Coakware business.

He said police revered him back and had already wanted money.

“I worked for a living from one day to the next one … Last week, some guards come. ‘” Upérez said it was told early July.

“Therefore, if I don’t give them (money), some appear, and be updated. I transferred it to $ 5.

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