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Venezuelans migrants in Peru struggle, lack healthcare

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    A holiday gala far away from home.
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    Musicians of the Roraima Orchestra
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    give free concerts to promote themselves.
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    The musicians are
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    mostly Venezuelan migrants
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    trying to make it in Peru.
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    But it's hard,
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    says lead viola player Guillermo Gonzalez.
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    Although he's a professional musician,
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    the only job he's been able to land,
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    cleaning car tires,
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    has increased injuries to his back.
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    Most Venezuelan migrants
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    are willing to do any job,
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    and most without healthcare.
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    I've stopped eating some food
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    to buy pills.
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    One of my colleagues
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    gave me part of his salary,
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    so I managed to pay for 10 appointments.
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    But for the most part,
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    no one gives me a hand.
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    More than 1.2 million Venezuelans
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    are displaced in Peru.
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    The National Superintendency for Migration
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    says nearly 80% of them don't have
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    health insurance or other benefits.
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    At the Santa Rosa Parish
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    on the outskirts of the capital,
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    at least 50 poor Venezuelan families
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    live on handouts.
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    Most don't have money for food
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    or a stable job,
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    and many have health problems.
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    The law here says that
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    only migrant children under 5 years old
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    and pregnant women
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    can have free medical care.
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    The rest must have a residence card,
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    but the majority doesn't have one.
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    Joselyn Rojas says her son Cristian
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    will soon turn 6
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    and lose his free healthcare.
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    However, she says,
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    it doesn't make much of a difference
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    to have a work permit.
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    My husband has the residency card,
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    but he works in an informal job
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    where he has no benefits.
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    So we're simply up in the air,
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    without anything.
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    Economists here say
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    Venezuelans have contributed to Peru's GDP
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    with 0.2% last year.
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    But the challenges continue to be great.
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    We're talking about
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    an extraordinary situation,
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    for which we have to generate
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    extraordinary norms.
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    We are talking with the authorities
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    to advance the paperwork
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    as the door opener for these rights.
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    Nearly 30% of Venezuelan migrants
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    are professionals, but 9 out of 10
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    do not work in their expertise.
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    Among these musicians, there are
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    security guards, cooks, street vendors.
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    Many say they hope
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    they can soon play full time, but for now,
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    their contribution to Peruvians
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    is music that heals the soul.
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    Mariana Sanchez, Al Jazeera, Lima, Peru.
Title:
Venezuelans migrants in Peru struggle, lack healthcare
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Refugee Crisis and Solutions
Duration:
02:49

English subtitles

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