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News > Latin America

Four Venezuelans Die Trying to Reach Curacao by Boat

  • Four Venezuelans die on boat trip made despite travel ban to Curacao US-VENEZUELA-CURACAO Pieces of wood are seen on the shore where bodies of four people were found, after their boat broke apart several miles before reaching Curacao, according to a Venezuelan family member of one of the passengers on board who survived, near Willemstad Pieces of wood are seen on the shore where bodies of four people were found, after their boat broke apart several miles before reaching Curacao.

    Four Venezuelans die on boat trip made despite travel ban to Curacao US-VENEZUELA-CURACAO Pieces of wood are seen on the shore where bodies of four people were found, after their boat broke apart several miles before reaching Curacao, according to a Venezuelan family member of one of the passengers on board who survived, near Willemstad Pieces of wood are seen on the shore where bodies of four people were found, after their boat broke apart several miles before reaching Curacao. | Photo: Reuters

Published 10 January 2018
Opinion

Venezuelans routinely travel to the more prosperous Curacao, despite a travel ban by Caracas, in search of work or staple products unavailable in their native country.

Four Venezuelans attempting to reach the Dutch Antilles island of Curacao died when their boat broke apart, authorities and family members of the passengers said on Wednesday.

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Venezuelans routinely travel to the more prosperous Curacao, despite a travel ban by Caracas, in search of work or staple products unavailable in their native country.

President Nicolas Maduro last week ordered a halt to all air and sea travel to the islands of Curacao, Bonaire and Aruba, in order to prevent smuggling of Venezuelan goods by what he called "mafias."

Two women and two men were "found on the beach this morning" Reginald Huggins of the Curacao police told local media on Wednesday. "This was not a crime, they were not murdered."

The boat left from the western coast of Venezuela but broke apart several miles before reaching Curacao, said a relative of one of the passengers on board who survived, according to Reuters.

"An enormous wave broke the boat in two; in fact, it was carrying too many passengers," said the family member, who asked not to be identified.

Curacao's government criticized the travel ban, saying in a statement that the "unilateral closure of the border with Venezuela does not fit with the search for better relations with our neighbor."

Venezuela's heavy subsidies for consumer goods, most notably fuel, have for years fueled contraband to neighboring nations. Maduro says such contraband is driving chronic product shortages, while his critics insist the country's state-led economic model is to blame.

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