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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Valentine’s Day a ‘rosy’ opportunity

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Santiago Torrado -


Valentine’s Day is a crazy rush for Colombia, one of the biggest flower exporters in the world, resulting in huge demand for labour in greenhouses near Bogota.


That’s how Rubiela Mendez and William Perez found themselves shivering in a cold they’d never known, preparing roses in a hangar 500 km from their hometown of Cucuta, on the jungle-steamy eastern border with Venezuela.


They are among hundreds of Colombians and Venezuelans brought in on buses — a 12-hour trip — to ready the fragrant flowers for shipment to the United States.


Valentine’s Day on February 14 is one of the times of year Americans spend the most on gifts. That means a bonanza for Colombia, which is the source of 74 per cent of US flower imports. Last year, between January and November, Colombia’s flower industry earned $1.3 billion.


Those working to prepare the roses see only the minimum wage — $300 a month — but for Mendez and Perez and labourers like them from the border, that’s far better than what they had been earning.


Although Colombia has a nationwide unemployment rate of 10 per cent, joblessness in Cucuta is significantly higher, reaching 16 per cent last year.


Mendez said the situation has worsened in past months with Venezuelans who are fleeing economic despair in the country coming over the border to work for half the rate paid to Colombians in the town.


“The situation in Cucuta is very difficult. No one wants to go back there because there’s no work,” the 26-year-old said.


This work stint in Tabio, a town just north of Bogota, was the first time she had been separated from her four-year-old daughter.


The task involves taking cut roses and scrupulously maintaining the “cold chain” — a supply chain that ensures the flowers are kept at very low temperatures in storage and transport so they still appear fresh when sold in shops.


Mendez’s employer, Sunshine Bouquet, had initially sent recruiters to the border thinking it could hire Venezuelan migrants willing to handle the roses. Instead it found a desperate and willing Colombian work force.


That’s how it came to be, in mid-January, that it transported in 600 people, 80 per cent of them Colombians, to its production center.


In Cucuta, “there are people suffering, and who very much want to work,” said the company boss, Felipe Gomez.


Perez, a 24-year-old Colombian, was relieved when he was chosen. He had spent seven years in Venezuela, and had returned home as the crisis there obliterated previous oil-buoyed prosperity.


“There is fear, horrible despair” in Venezuela now, he said, describing rampant public safety woes and lack of food.


The outflow of people from Venezuela is reversing a trend that had once seen Colombians heading to their neighbour to escape a half-century conflict between their government and Marxist FARC rebels.


Today, the FARC has disarmed and transformed into a political party. And Venezuela has become destitute, prey to hyperinflation.


Colombian officials say more than 550,000 Venezuelans have crossed the border, legally or illegally, and the number is expected to double by June.


According to Ivan Daniel Jaramillo, at a labour observatory in Bogota’s Del Rosario University, unemployment in Cucuta spiked “because it


is a border zone receiving this migratory pressure.”


The rose business in Tabio doesn’t represent a long-term solution for the 600 labourers brought in. But it is a temporary fix that has given them some respite.


Many hope to be taken on as full time employees by the company, which has promised to hire 20 per cent after the Valentine’s Day rush is over, or to find some other opportunity.


“If I don’t get to stay, I’d like to try Bogota and start a new life,” said Perez.


— AFP


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