Costa Rica re-opens border, issuing visas to Cuban migrants
By Zach Dyer
PASO CANOAS, Costa Rica (Reuters) - To cheers from a large crowd of
Cuban migrants, Costa Rica on Saturday re-opened its border with Panama
after a sudden tightening in its immigration policy had left more than
1,200 of them stranded there.
Like other countries in the region, Costa Rica has seen a surge in the
number of Cubans entering as the process of detente between Washington
and Havana announced in December stirs fears that longstanding U.S.
asylum rights may soon be lost.
Costa Rica surprised the migrants on Friday by detaining them at the
border, prompting some Cubans to block the Inter-American Highway for a
few hours in protest until the government began issuing them with
seven-day transit visas.
However, it is unclear how the migrants will fare in neighboring
Nicaragua, which refused 100 Cubans deported from a holding center in
Costa Rica on Friday.
"The situation we're facing is extraordinary – we've never dealt with
this before," said Costa Rica's Assistant Director of Immigration Gladys
Jiménez. "We hope Nicaragua will accept them with their documents so
they can continue on."
Cuban migrants receive special treatment in the United States from Cold
War-era arrangements, and have long traveled through Mexico and Central
America to reach the U.S. border.
If successful, they can take advantage of the so-called "wet-foot,
dry-foot" policy under which Cubans who set foot on U.S. soil can stay,
while those captured at sea are sent back.
It is a policy many Cubans feel may be running out of time.
"The situation between the United States and Cuba is an issue because
they're talking, and could possibly deny us the support of the Cuban
Adjustment Act and the ability to request asylum," said Alain Pentón,
38, a Cuban migrant at the border.
Pentón said he left Cuba on a route taken by many: flying legally to
Ecuador, then crossing illegally into Colombia, Panama and Costa Rica.
The overland route was safer and less heavily policed than the Straits
of Florida, he said.
As of September, 12,166 Cuban migrants had been identified this year by
Costa Rican authorities, more than double the figure for last year and
over five times the 2013 total.
According to U.S. Customs and Border Patrol data requested by the Pew
Research Center, 27,296 Cubans entered the United States in the first
nine months of the 2015 fiscal year, a 78 percent increase from 2014.
(Editing by Dave Graham, Bernard Orr)
Source: Costa Rica re-opens border, issuing visas to Cuban migrants -
Yahoo News -
http://news.yahoo.com/costa-rica-opens-border-issuing-visas-cuban-migrants-224503271.html;_ylt=AwrC1ClMS0hW_wQA_RrQtDMD;_ylu=X3oDMTByaWg0YW05BGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwM4BHZ0aWQDBHNlYwNzcg--
No comments:
Post a Comment