• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

The latest chronic shortage affecting Venezuela? Passports

Status
Not open for further replies.

MJPIA

Member
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ela-passports-vanish-when-they-re-needed-most
Joel Bustamante was fed up with the soaring cost of living and the shootouts and petty crime in his working-class Caracas neighborhood. He was ready, he decided, to do as so many of his fellow Venezuelans have done and flee the crisis-torn country. He lined up a factory job in Chile, bought a one-way plane ticket and packed his bags.
All he needed was a new passport. He ordered it six months before his scheduled flight. Plenty of time, he was told. But days of waiting turned into weeks, then months. To this day, eleven months after that flight left for Chile without him, Bustamante, a 24-year-old cab driver, continues to wait.
President Nicolas Maduro’s government has acknowledged the passport problem, and last week launched a new “express” online option that offers to deliver one within 72 hours for more than double the standard price. It’s unclear how many have managed to try the expedited process; the website’s been crashing.
The reason the passport agency, known as Saime, has given for the shortfall is that it doesn’t have enough “materials.” It might be the government just can’t afford to buy all the paper it needs. Phone calls and emails to the agency and the Interior Ministry weren’t returned.
On some days, hundreds queue up outside Saime’s headquarters in Caracas, arriving as early as 5 a.m. Even for those with more mundane reasons for wanting a passport -- to visit family or travel for business -- the process can be excruciating.
Sofia, a 58-year-old retired school teacher, has taken four 100-mile bus trips from the city of Valencia to Caracas in her quest to be in Spain for the birth of a grandchild this month. The last time she asked if the elusive materials had arrived, she said, “they practically laughed in my face, saying, ‘Don’t you realize this is Venezuela?’”
Scores are stuck abroad too. “Basically, I’m imprisoned in Canada,” said Elena, 43, who is a legal resident there and has been trying for two years to renew her passport so she can travel with her two children; like many interviewed she asked that her last name not be used.
The wealthy can often grease some palms to finagle a way around the famine of goods. That appears to be the case with passports, with fixers who have connections or officials themselves willing to expedite the process for the equivalent of several hundred dollars, or more. Most of Venezuela’s 30 million residents can’t come up with that kind of money
Of 1.8 million passports requested last year, as few as 300,000 were supplied, according to Anthony Daquin, a former adviser to the Interior Ministry. Luis Florido, an opposition congressman, puts the current deficit at 3 million.
Waiting outside Saime headquarters before dawn, Jose Azuaje, a 36-year-old office manager, said he applied nearly four months ago for papers for his asthmatic son. Desperate to have him treated in Colombia, he returns again and again for fresh word on his request.
“You can’t do anything,” a bleary-eyed Azuaje said. “You’re trapped.”
Shortages of food, money, toilet paper, medicine and now passports for those who attempt to flee for a better life.
A nightmare especially for those seeking medical treatment for their loved ones.

Lock if old.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom