Anonymous ID: 9a7222 Jan. 27, 2019, 11:21 p.m. No.4937037   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>4936972

I’m more concerned about winning back the culture. There’s a lot of work to do even after the scum hang. We need to take back the schools, the cinema, even the sciences have been infested with the Marxist stupidity. No complacency!

Anonymous ID: 9a7222 Jan. 27, 2019, 11:42 p.m. No.4937138   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7273 >>7494 >>7579

Brazil’s response to the influx of Venezuelans had a turning point when Brazilian President Michel Temer visited Roraima in February of this year. Following his visit, Brazil declared a social emergency in the border state. As a result, the Brazilian federal government took over control of crisis management from state and local authorities, placing the military and police in charge of most operations and pledging $60 million of federal funding to respond to the crisis. Two strategic operations were created: Operación Acolhida, which focuses on the humanitarian crisis, such as providing shelters, food, and medicine, and Operación Escudo, which is focused on security risks such as drug trafficking. These two strategic operations, along with about a dozen Brazilian government agencies, are all coordinated by an overarching government agency named Casa Civil.

 

The main protagonists on the front line of the refugee crisis have been UNHCR, local Brazilian partnering agencies, and the Brazilian military, which provides food and security to the shelters. These agencies have had impressive success in setting up camps quickly and running them efficiently. Almost all the migrants we spoke with living in the camps reported feeling safe and well cared for. However, the local implementing partners already appear to be reaching the limits of their administrative and physical capacity. Although several more shelters are supposed to be built in Pacaraima and Boa Vista later this summer, the ultimate total capacity of all shelters planned will be only 5,000–a small fraction of the 40,000 Venezuelans currently in Brazil. If the humanitarian and migration crisis continues to worsen as expected, much greater capacity will be needed.