Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Stranded Cuban Migrants on the Move Again

Stranded Cuban Migrants on the Move Again
VOA News
January 13, 2016 12:45 AM

A group of 180 Cubans have left Costa Rica, flying to El Salvador as
part of a program designed to help migrants on their way to the United
States.

The group was stuck in Costa Rica for more than a month after Nicaragua
closed its borders, saying Costa Rica had created a "humanitarian
crisis" by issuing transit visas to more than 1,000 Cubans. Once they
arrive in El Salvador, they are expected to board buses bound for the
United States.

Costa Rica's foreign minister Manuel Gonzales said Tuesday that the
operation to help the migrants move along "has been successful so far"
and added that the goal is to have two flights per day out of Costa Rica
once the program is up and running.

The migrants must pay about $500 per person to cover the costs of the
trip, including plane and bus fare.

Ministers from Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, and Honduras are set to
meet next week and evaluate the first trip. About 8,000 migrants are
reported to be awaiting passage from Costa Rica to the United States.

U.S. policy allows Cuban migrants who arrive by land to enter the
country and apply for residency. Those intercepted at sea are sent
back to Cuba. Many Cubans fear that the thaw in relations between Cuba
and the U.S. may eventually lead to an end to that preferential
treatment. The numbers of Cubans trying to make their way to the
United States has risen substantially since the announcement in December
of 2014 that the two countries were restoring diplomatic relations.

Source: Stranded Cuban Migrants on the Move Again -
http://www.voanews.com/content/stranded-cuban-migrants-on-the-move-again/3142934.html

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