Local leaders say pleas for help in dealing w/ the influx of migrants have fallen on deaf ears.
This is AcandĂ, at the mouth of the jungle, where residents lack even basic services.
In the absence of any significant state presence, the residents of Necoclà and Acandà have taken over the migrant route, turning it into a multimillion $ business — led by some of their elected leaders. Here, migrants who have paid $170/person for passage march to a first camp.
đź§µOnce again, we traveled across Peru to document ongoing protest.
The unrest is now far broader than anger over who runs the country. Instead, it represents a profound frustration with Peru’s young democracy. W. @federicorios
Rather than fade, protests in rural Peru that began more than a month ago over the ouster of the former president have only grown in size and in the scope of demonstrators’ demands. This is from a roadblock we passed last week outside of Juliaca, in southern Peru.
At first, demonstrators sought the reinstatement of Pres. Castillo or new elections as fast as possible. Now, they want something much bigger: a new constitution and even, as one sign put it, “to refound a new nation.” Here are police responding at a roadblock outside Juliaca.
đź§µJUST IN. The U.S. has granted a new license to Chevron, allowing it to expand ops in Venezuela. This could represent a step toward allowing Vzla to re-enter the internat'l oil market, something Maduro desperately needs to improve the economy.
Some caveats/explanation below...
First, here is our story on the Chevron deal and related talks between the Venezuelan government and Venezuelan opposition. nytimes.com/2022/11/25/wor…
Second, the United States is granting Chevron permission to expand ops in Venezuela — a chip for Maduro — only after Maduro agreed that up to $3 billion in state funds could be transferred to humanitarian fund by the United Nations.
🧵A rare meeting between leaders of Venezuela’s bitterly divided government and opposition is expected to result in two major agreements meant to ease the country’s complex political and humanitarian crisis.
The meeting between the Venezuelan government and opposition partly reflects the economic ripple effects of Russia’s Ukraine invasion, which has reduced global oil supplies and pushed the U.S. to reconsider its restrictions on energy companies operating in Venezuela.
If all goes as planned, Saturday's talks will lead to an agreement to transfer ~$3 billion in VZ govt funds into a humanitarian program administered by the UN — a concession by Nicolás Maduro, who has long denied the scope of the suffering that has unfolded under his watch.
1/HILO: Nuestra más reciente entrega en una serie sobre ser mujer en la crisis de Venezuela trata sobre cómo la falta de anticonceptivos ha cambiado radicalmente la vida de las mujeres. nytimes.com/es/2021/02/20/…
2/En Venezuela, el salario mĂnimo es de 1,50 dĂłlares. Un paquete de 3 condones cuesta 4,40. Un mes de la pĂldora cuesta 11. Si eres una mujer en esta situaciĂłn, ÂżcĂłmo te proteges? ÂżCĂłmo controlas tu futuro?
3/Los anticonceptivos en Venezuela solĂan ser gratuitos en muchas clĂnicas del gobierno y accesibles en las farmacias privadas. Pero la contracepciĂłn desapareciĂł mayormente al perder poder adquisitivo el gobierno. Ahora ha vuelto a ciertos sitios, pero a precios prohibitivos.
1/THREAD: Our latest in a series on womanhood amid Venezuela’s crisis examines how an absence of birth control has radically changed women's lives. nytimes.com/2021/02/20/wor…
2/Today in Venezuela, the minimum wage is $1.50 USD. A pack of condoms costs $4.40. A month of birth control pills costs $11. Imagine you’re a woman in this situation. How do you protect yourself? How do you control your future?
3/In Venezuela, birth control was once free at many government clinics and broadly affordable at private pharmacies. But as the Venezuelan government lost purchase power, contraception largely disappeared. It has come back in some places, but at inaccessible prices.
THREAD: Our new story traces the spread of coronavirus deep into the Brazilian Amazon, where we found exposure rates as high as New York City and death rates among the highest in the country. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
The Amazon River is South America’s great life source, supporting an estimated 30 million people. But it is now spreading disease, as boats ply the river, carrying the virus from town to town.
The problem: The Amazon region is particularly ill-prepared to handle this emergency. Cities and villages have few doctors and even fewer ventilators and ICUS.