Colombia-Venezuela Border to Partially Reopen Amid Economic Crisis

When it was opened last month, hundreds of thousands reportedly poured across.

— -- Venezuelans, many of whom are suffering amid severe food and medicine shortages, should soon be able to cross into neighboring Colombia to buy basic necessities that are hard to come by in their homeland.

On Saturday, the two countries will begin the process of reopening their common border -- nearly a year after it was shut.

Last month, the border was opened twice to allow Venezuelans to cross and shop for basic necessities, the BBC reported. In one weekend, more than 100,000 Venezuelans reportedly crossed into Colombia.

While Venezuela has the world’s largest proven oil reserves according to OPEC, power outages, long queues for food and rampant violence are commonplace.

The border openings come as Venezuela -- quickly becoming a pariah within the community of nations across the Americas -- is reportedly fighting to hold the rotating presidency of MercoSur, a leading trade bloc in South America.

The agency says that Maduro, the Venezuelan president, called the group opposing his country’s leadership of the bloc “the triple alliance of torturer presidents.”