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Peru Tightens Chile Border As Venezuelan Migrants Rush To Escape Crackdown
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Peru's southern border with Chile has become the stage for two overlapping dramas: a huge migration wave and a heated election next door.
Hundreds of migrants, many of them Venezuelan families who had settled in Chile, have gathered in the desert crossing between Arica and Tacna, trying to move north before the political mood turns even tougher.
President José Jerí responded by declaring a 60-day state of emergency along key stretches of the frontier, including the Tacna region. Police stay in charge of internal order but now work side by side with soldiers, drones and permanent patrols.
The message from Lima is firm: Peru will accept legal migration, but it will not open the door to irregular flows triggered by campaign speeches abroad.
On the ground, that decision looks harsh but controlled. General Arturo Valverde, the police chief in Tacna, has ordered extra patrols while officers turn back people without passports or visas. Families with children sleep in the open between checkpoints.
Many say they want only to cross Peru and return to Colombia, Ecuador or Venezuela, not to settle. Instead, they are stuck in a strip of sand that has become a waiting room for two states' security systems.
The immediate trigger lies in Santiago. Right-leaning presidential contender José Antonio Kast has told irregular migrants they have 100 days to leave Chile voluntarily or face expulsions if he wins the 14 December runoff against Jeannette Jara.
His tough language on crime and borders speaks to frustrated voters, but it also sends shock waves across the region. The deeper story is regional.
Since 2015, about 7.9 million Venezuelans have left their country, with around 1.5 million now in Peru and almost 700,000 in Chile.
Governments that once relied on generous, improvised migration rules are now under pressure to restore order, predictability and basic security.
For expats and investors, the lesson is clear. Border corridors like Arica–Tacna are not just lines on a map; they are arteries for trade and tourism.
When parties treat migration as a quick fix - through loose amnesties or dramatic expulsions - those arteries can clog overnight, and the consequences travel well beyond the desert.
Hundreds of migrants, many of them Venezuelan families who had settled in Chile, have gathered in the desert crossing between Arica and Tacna, trying to move north before the political mood turns even tougher.
President José Jerí responded by declaring a 60-day state of emergency along key stretches of the frontier, including the Tacna region. Police stay in charge of internal order but now work side by side with soldiers, drones and permanent patrols.
The message from Lima is firm: Peru will accept legal migration, but it will not open the door to irregular flows triggered by campaign speeches abroad.
On the ground, that decision looks harsh but controlled. General Arturo Valverde, the police chief in Tacna, has ordered extra patrols while officers turn back people without passports or visas. Families with children sleep in the open between checkpoints.
Many say they want only to cross Peru and return to Colombia, Ecuador or Venezuela, not to settle. Instead, they are stuck in a strip of sand that has become a waiting room for two states' security systems.
The immediate trigger lies in Santiago. Right-leaning presidential contender José Antonio Kast has told irregular migrants they have 100 days to leave Chile voluntarily or face expulsions if he wins the 14 December runoff against Jeannette Jara.
His tough language on crime and borders speaks to frustrated voters, but it also sends shock waves across the region. The deeper story is regional.
Since 2015, about 7.9 million Venezuelans have left their country, with around 1.5 million now in Peru and almost 700,000 in Chile.
Governments that once relied on generous, improvised migration rules are now under pressure to restore order, predictability and basic security.
For expats and investors, the lesson is clear. Border corridors like Arica–Tacna are not just lines on a map; they are arteries for trade and tourism.
When parties treat migration as a quick fix - through loose amnesties or dramatic expulsions - those arteries can clog overnight, and the consequences travel well beyond the desert.
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