![]() ![]() If things in Venezuela get better, I’d go back again, but if they don’t, what am I going to do there?” she said.īarranquilla is estimated to have some 20,000 people back home from Venezuela, who to a certain degree affect the levels of insecurity and unemployment while collapsing the educational and healthcare systems. Sarmiento told EFE that her husband had worked in Caracas as a construction worker, but that “here he’s reinventing himself as a barber, which doesn’t pay that much. ![]() Born in Campo de la Cruz, a small town on the Colombian Caribbean, she acquired Venezuelan nationality while in the neighboring country – but had to return to her native soil with her two children after her husband was deported and she was overcome by economic difficulties. Maria Fernanda Sarmiento, 22, is one of them.
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