Migrants returning to Venezuela face debt and harsh living conditions
- Many Venezuelans, including P�rez, are returning home under worsening conditions due to a political and economic crisis and have experienced debt and hardships abroad.
- The White House has changed immigration policies, seeking to deport Venezuelans and ending protections while Venezuelan President Nicol�s Maduro accepted some deportees.
- Returning migrants like P�rez face dire living situations with triple-digit inflation and a minimum wage of 130 bolivars, or $1.02, unchanged since 2022.
- P�rez reported police harassment upon returning, stating she was asked for money after previously fleeing her country due to corruption issues.
63 Articles
63 Articles
Many Venezuelans are returning home, having fled the economic crisis, inflation and the low wages that have made food and other basic things unaffordable.
Since January, the White House has put an end to the protections of immigrants and has aggressively sought their deportation. MARACAIBO, Venezuela — The hands of Yosbelin Pérez have manufactured tens of thousands of round aluminum plates that...
She, her husband and her five children returned to their South American country in March. The Covide-19 pandemic pushed migrants to the United States More than 7.7 million Venezuelans have been migrated since 2013, when oil dependent on their country has collapsed. Most have settled in Latin America and the Caribbean, but after the Cavid-19 pandemic, migrants saw the United States as their best chance of improving their living conditions. Many V…
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