Two violence-plagued Latin American countries are warning against traveling to the US following the weekend’s back-to-back mass shootings.

Uruguay and Venezuela — both nations that US citizens are already warned off visiting — issued their own official travel advisories on Monday.

Uruguay’s Foreign Ministry urged citizens to take “extreme precautions” if traveling to the US because of “growing indiscriminate violence, mostly for hate crimes, including racism and discrimination.”

It warned of “indiscriminate possession of firearms” and advised Uruguayans to avoid large public events including shopping centers, art and food festivals, and religious gatherings.

It also warned about going to cities that it calls “among the 20 most dangerous in the world,” listing Detroit, Baltimore and Albuquerque.

The warning came after the US State Department issued its own travel advisory for Uruguay on Aug. 2 due to an increase in violent crime, including homicides, armed robberies and carjacking.

Venezuela’s Foreign Ministry also issued a statement suggesting that citizens “postpone travel” to the US because of “violence and indiscriminate hate crimes.”

The Venezuelan Foreign Ministry cited the back-to-back shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio — which left a total of 31 dead — in a statement.

“These growing acts of violence have found echo and sustenance in the speeches and actions impregnated with racial discrimination and hatred against migrant populations pronounced and executed from the supremacist elite that hold political power in Washington,” the Foreign Ministry said, according to the Washington Post.

The US has also warned against travel to Venezuala “due to crime, civil unrest, poor health infrastructure, kidnapping, and arbitrary arrest and detention of U.S. citizens.”

Several of the 22 killed at the Walmart in El Paso on Saturday were from Mexico, and shooting suspect Patrick Crucius is believed to have posted a manifesto blaming a “Hispanic invasion” of the US for his rage.

With Post wires