Venezuela crisis: UN aid effort continues amid political upheaval

January 07, 2026 in Regional

The backdrop

  • Venezuela has endured years of economic collapse, political instability, hyperinflation and economic sanctions from Washington, compounded by floods, landslides and other climate shocks.
  • The recent seizure of President Nicolás Maduro by US special forces has added a new layer of uncertainty to an already volatile situation.
  • According to the UN aid coordination office, OCHA7.9 million people — more than a quarter of the population — need urgent humanitarian assistance.

A large UN footprint

  • The UN maintains a broad operational presence in Venezuela, with most agencies active on the ground.
  • Work spans food security, healthcare, gender equality, education, decent work, water and sanitation, and peacebuilding.
  • Agencies including the World Food Programme (WFP), World Health Organization (WHO) and the reproductive rights agency, UNFPA, deliver life-saving aid and help keep essential services running — from food distributions and nutrition screenings to maternal care and clean water projects.
  • Following the latest political developments, UN leadership in the country said it is closely assessing needs to ensure support can be scaled up if required.

Human rights under scrutiny

  • Venezuela’s human rights situation remains a core UN concern.
  • The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) continues to monitor violations.
  • Briefing the Human Rights Council last month, High Commissioner Volker Türk warned of deepening repression, citing increased militarisation, threats to journalists and human rights defenders, arbitrary detention and enforced disappearances.
  • UN investigators have stressed that accountability for long-documented abuses — including extrajudicial killings, torture and sexual and gender-based violence — must not be overshadowed by the current crisis.

A long-running exodus

  • It is too early to know whether recent events will intensify the mass displacement that has unfolded over the past decade.
  • Millions of Venezuelans have already fled repression, instability and economic hardship.
  • Nearly half of those who have left rely on informal, low-paid work; 42 percent struggle to afford enough food, and 23 percent live in overcrowded housing.

Regional response

  • The UN refugee agency UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) coordinate a regional response across 17 countries.
  • This effort has helped more than 4.5 million Venezuelans in Latin America and the Caribbean obtain regular status, giving access to documentation, protection and basic services.
  • The latest regional plan seeks $1.4 billion to reach 2.3 million vulnerable people, focusing on jobs, education, healthcare and protection.

The funding gap

Despite reiterated UN commitment to Venezuelans’ dignity and protection, resources are stretched.

In 2025, just 17 per cent of the over $600 million required for Venezuela’s Humanitarian Response Plan had been received.