Venezuela’s Refugees: Most vulnerable living life in the shadows

Keinya Alvarez, 22, from Zulia sat alone, cross legged on a small stool to a backdrop of mold-stained peeling paint of the kitchen and played nervously with her large silver hooped earrings. To the rear of the damp 12 square metre flat was a dark space with no windows, a bedroom which had to accommodate five people. She said: “We were told many residents of Ibarra were coming to hurt Venezuelans occupying this building, those with children fled quickly leaving what little possessions they had returning to Colombia. As we tried to leave they took all our possessions even our shoes. They burned our passports in front of us.” Today many Landlords in Ibarra evict Venezuelan tenants citing they are all criminals. The emotion for Keinya became all too much to bear, she buried her head in her hands and wept inconsolably. “We have all lost our jobs, and we survive on $3 a day to feed all of us. We left our country because there was no food, we were starving and now we are starving again here.”

Paddy Dowling