Colombia asks for help to vaccinate Venezuelan migrants
President Duque says Colombia needs help to vaccinate over 1.7 million undocumented Venezuelan migrants in country
Colombia
BOGOTA, Colombia
Colombia's president called for international help Wednesday in vaccinating undocumented Venezuelan migrants against the coronavirus.
"We want to call on the international community to help us mobilize resources and vaccines to attend to this population," Ivan Duque said in a press briefing.
It is estimated that more than 1.7 million people from neighboring Venezuela are living in Colombia.
Duque called for international intervention ahead of a mass vaccination campaign that will begin on Feb. 20. The country has secured 35 million doses for its more than 51 million people.
In December, President Duque announced that undocumented Venezuelan migrants would be excluded from the mass vaccination program against COVID-19, for which he was harshly criticized. He said the reason was to avoid "a call to stampede, where everyone crosses the border to be vaccinated."
On Wednesday, he criticized the scarce international resources to meet the massive arrival of Venezuelans fleeing the economic crisis in their country.
"There is much concern about migrants and refugees [...] In the world, many say ‘What a pain,’ ‘What a pity.’ But the mobilization of resources has been very meager," he said.
“When we look at the Syrian crisis, the contribution of the international community per migrant is 2,000 [US] dollars. The contribution of the migratory crisis in Venezuela -- which exceeds the Syrian one -- does not reach 200 dollars per migrant,” he added.
Colombia has registered over 2.1 million coronavirus cases and nearly 55,000 deaths, according to a tally by US-based Johns Hopkins University.
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