The country of Trinidad and Tobago is only 7 miles away from Venezuela, which is currently in the midst of a political, agricultural, and economic collapse. As 10% of Venezuelans have left their country, an estimated 40,000 have fled to the small, neighboring island nation of Trinidad and Tobago. The Trinidadian government and people have done much to aid Venezuelans, but can only do so much and are feeling stretched beyond their capacity to assist the Venezuelans who can be called refugees or economic migrants, depending on how you see this situation.
I believe that this is the first in the BBC’s new series, The Displaced and look forward to seeing more. Not surprisingly, when reading the Youtube comments on this, many from Trinidad feel that this reporting did not convey an accurate portrayal of the situation, that most of the Trinidadians that are welcoming to migrants and not xenophobic. I believe, to some extent, that the BBC is judging the Trinidadian government much as it would a large, developed country with a far greater capacity to accommodate an quick demographic influx.
PM Rowley responds to BBC documentary, The Displaced “is not worthy of the BBC” pic.twitter.com/8JYiBy9FTG
— CCN TV6 (@tv6tnt) September 16, 2019
GeoEd Tags: South America, Venezuela, borders, migration, refugees, poverty.
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