One of the main headaches of Colombia’s next president will be neighboring Venezuela.
Ivan Duque
Ivan Duque, the right-wing candidate hand-picked by the former president Alvaro Uribe, proposed to use the $300 million dollars destined for the peace process with the FARC guerrillas to finance “humanitarian attention” to refugees on the border with Venezuela.
While he says Venezuelans should receive opportunities like Colombians did in Venezuela, he proposes that with other nearby countries they should agree on a temporary permit plan so that Colombia doesn’t continue to take the brunt of migrants.
He also says Venezuelans entering Colombia through legal and illegal means should have access to “humanitarian aid that allows people to have basic care.”
At a the Tele Caribe debate, he said he would learn from the Syrian refugee crisis in Europe.
Gustavo Petro
Leftist candidate Gustavo Petro proposed at the Tele Caribe debate to hold an international conference of what to do with Venezuelan migration like he said was done for Colombia during the displacement of its population in the 1990s and early this century.
He also said during the debate that Venezuela serves “as a mirror to Colombia” for its reliance on the oil economy and that the next government must avoid doing the same.
Sergio Fajardo
Centrist candidate Sergio Fajardo says he would strengthen controls to enter Colombia to prevent crime from the Venezuelan population.
Fajardo told Radio Nacional de Colombia that his government would double efforts with mayors and governors to better receive the migrant population.
Fajardo says he would continue to denounce the “21st-century dictatorship” against democracy in Venezuela to the international community and continue to push for diplomatic channels to reinstitute democracy.
Fajardo also says we would need the help of “the international community, on providing health, education, security, and employment to Venezuelans who are arriving in our territory.”
German Vargas Lleras
While Vargas Lleras calls for “solidarity” with Venezuelan migrants, he proposes greater border controls and deportations.
“We are not prepared, a comprehensive policy of more control and deportation is required for thousands of criminals who are aggravating the issue of insecurity in all cities of Colombia,” Vargas Lleras told El Espectador.
He also says that “the worst is yet to come” but doesn’t say what he would do for the “200 thousand Venezuelans demanding work, health, education, wellbeing and public services.”