Venezuelans try to rebuild after shattered U.S. migration dreams
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[December 20, 2022]
By Keren Torres and Steven Grattan
EL TOCUYO, Venezuela (Reuters) - Julio Perez, a 38-year-old auto
mechanic, sold his car and tools to make the dangerous journey from
Venezuela to the United States.
But like many migrants in the two months since the United States changed
its immigration policy, he opted to board a plane back to Venezuela.
The United States on Oct. 12 expanded the existing Title 42 policy, used
since the pandemic to send migrants from Central America and elsewhere
back to Mexico and other countries without a chance to seek asylum, to
include Venezuelans.
Perez, who went without eating for two of the four days trekking through
the Darien jungle, says he dreams of trying again by plane, but that his
means are limited.
"For now, I'm staying here, to start from scratch," he said.
A U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson told Reuters
that the number of Venezuelans who crossed the southwest border without
authorization is down to around 100 a day on average from 1,100 a day
the week before the Oct. 12 announcement.
Reuters spoke to nine migrants who crossed the Darien and had to return
because of the policy change, including Franklin Sandoval a 22-year-old,
who, like Perez, hails from Venezuela's west-central city of El Tocuyo.
Sandoval trekked through muddy pathways and waste-high rivers, only to
find out the news of the Title 42 policy after emerging.
"To be told this news was really, really awful after everything I
experienced there in the jungle," Sandoval said.
Upon receiving the news of the U.S. policy change, which has been
slammed by human rights groups, Sandoval too decided to cut his losses
and return to Venezuela via Panama.
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Julio Perez, 38, who had hoped to get to
the U.S. to work for money to build a house for his family in
Venezuela, stands in front of the gate of his old mechanical
workshop, in Caracas, Venezuela December 6, 2022. REUTERS/Jesus
Hernandez
Since returning, he has been unable to find work and says he suffers
anxiety attacks remembering the journey.
"When you leave the Darien, you don't laugh or cry, you're
traumatized," he said.
The Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), a rights group, says
the move has exacerbated an existing humanitarian crisis pointing to
families traveling with children and a lack of shelters.
One Mexican official told Reuters that the comprehensive deal they
reached with the United States on Venezuelan asylum seekers had
shown "good results" since it granted humanitarian access to
thousands of them by air in addition to the expulsion provision.
The Title 42 policy is now set to end on Dec. 21 unless legal
challenges delay that deadline, adding to more confusion for
migrants.
Like Sandoval, Perez - who says he would never attempt to cross the
Darien again - is still haunted by his journey of broken dreams.
"I don't sleep well," Perez said. "I keep waking up remembering what
we went through there."
(Reporting by Keren Torres in El Tocuyo and Steven Grattan in Sao
Paulo; Additional reporting by Ted Hesson and Daina Solomon; Editing
by Christian Plumb and Lisa Shumaker)
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