The Green Screen

Full Version: Cubans leaving
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
I guess the locals aren't as impressed with "the changes" as the tourist are.


http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticN...22&sp=true

Flow of Cubans leaving by sea rising: U.S
Thu Apr 10, 2008 4:41pm EDT  


HAVANA (Reuters) - The number of Cubans risking their lives to leave their communist-run country illegally by sea to reach the United States is rising, U.S. officials in Havana said on Thursday.

Since October 1, 2007, 2,891 Cubans have tried to cross the Florida Straits; 1,697 made it to the United States and were allowed to stay while the U.S. Coast Guard intercepted 1,194 and sent them back.

The U.S. officials said the figures showed that average Cubans had little faith that life would improve in the one-party socialist state under President Raul Castro, who succeeded his ailing brother Fidel Castro in February.

"The numbers continue to rise. That's the response of the Cuban people," U.S. Interests Section chief Michael Parmly told foreign reporters. "So many of them are young people. Why do they want to leave?"

The number of people attempting the risky voyage has risen by 21 percent compared to the same period last year. The number intercepted by the Coast Guard increased by 65 percent.

Most Cubans now attempt the crossing in fast speed boats rather than the makeshift vessels seen in the past.

Cuba has long accused Washington of encouraging Cubans to risk their lives at sea by offering the prize of almost automatic residency to those who make it ashore.

U.S. officials say Cuba's lack of political freedom and economic stagnation drives its people to leave.

Even more Cubans try to reach the United States through Mexico. Last year, 11,486 undocumented Cubans arrived at U.S. Southwest Customs and Border Patrol land ports. So far this fiscal year, which began on October 1, some 5,500 have done so.

To avoid a repeat of the 1994 mass exodus, when 35,000 Cubans headed out to sea on fishing boats, rafts and inner tubes, the U.S and Cuban governments signed migration accords under which the United States grants 20,000 visas a year to Cubans to ensure legal, orderly and safe emigration.

Illegal Cuban migration to the United States began to surge again in 2005. When Fidel Castro fell ill the next year, the flow dipped, due in part to increased security in Cuba and expectations of change.

To speed up legal migration, the United States inaugurated a Cuban family reunification program on Thursday that will cut delays in processing eligible emigres to 6 weeks from between 3 and 7 years at present.

Three families with relatives in the United States were the first to receive their travel documents in the program that could benefit 12,000 pending cases, involving an estimated 40,000 family members.

After dragging its feet for two years, Cuba's government this month authorized the U.S. Interest Section to hire more consular staff, which will speed up visa processing.

(Editing by Alan Elsner)
Ak,

The changing are just happening, and if the rumor that wage caps were lifted is true, that is another change that can be potentially good in the long run with the other changes.

Some things can change over night, such as letting political prisoners free, but changes in the economy take time. Even the whole economy become free over night, it will take time to produce and raise the GDP. In that time, I'm sure people would still leave while big changes are happening because they've lived through the down-time so long, I can understand that they would rather work at Wall-Mart tommorrow for a wage rather than wait a few years for Cuba's economy to get moving (if it ever did).

Raul has only been in 2 months. That's not a lot of time.
Zelig Wrote:Ak,

The changing are just happening, and if the rumor that wage caps were lifted is true, that is another change that can be potentially good in the long run with the other changes.

Some things can change over night, such as letting political prisoners free, but changes in the economy take time. Even the whole economy become free over night, it will take time to produce and raise the GDP. In that time, I'm sure people would still leave while big changes are happening because they've lived through the down-time so long, I can understand that they would rather work at Wall-Mart tommorrow for a wage rather than wait a few years for Cuba's economy to get moving (if it ever did).

Raul has only been in 2 months. That's not a lot of time.

You don't need to be telling me, tell the Cubans who have had enough. The're the ones leaving.

AK
Zelig Wrote:Ak,

The changing are just happening, and if the rumor that wage caps were lifted is true, that is another change that can be potentially good in the long run with the other changes.

Some things can change over night, such as letting political prisoners free, but changes in the economy take time. Even the whole economy become free over night, it will take time to produce and raise the GDP. In that time, I'm sure people would still leave while big changes are happening because they've lived through the down-time so long, I can understand that they would rather work at Wall-Mart tommorrow for a wage rather than wait a few years for Cuba's economy to get moving (if it ever did).

Raul has only been in 2 months. That's not a lot of time.
Raul and Fidel have being on for 49 years Zelig ,stop being ridiculous, LOL  Action_smiley_041
Even Fidel Just said it.
By Marc Frank
1 hour, 10 minutes ago



HAVANA (Reuters) - An ailing Fidel Castro took partial credit on Wednesday for firing Cuba's long-serving education minister this week, indicating that he would remain influential behind the scenes as long as he is able.

ADVERTISEMENT

Castro, who was succeeded by his younger brother Raul Castro as president this year after almost half a century at the helm, blasted former minister Luis Ignacio Gomez for being "burnt out" and "losing revolutionary consciousness."

In a newspaper column, Castro laid into Gomez for traveling abroad too much and taking personal credit for advances in Cuba's education system.

In the first cabinet change under Cuba's new president, Gomez was summarily replaced on Tuesday after more than 18 years on the job.

Gomez was viewed as one of Fidel Castro's staunchest supporters who for the last decade had faithfully carried out educational reforms proposed by Castro and questioned by many teachers and parents.

Many Cubans have criticized the decline of Cuba's vast free education system during grass roots discussions fostered by Raul Castro on the socialist state's ills.

"In this special and important case, in addition to my personal views, I was consulted and completely informed," Fidel Castro wrote in an article published by the ruling Communist Party newspaper Granma and other state-run media.

The 81-year-old revolutionary leader has not appeared in public since undergoing intestinal surgery in July 2006 from which he never fully recovered. His whereabouts and medical condition remain state secrets.

For a year now he has written opinion columns on foreign and domestic affairs that appear in newspapers and are repeatedly read on state-run radio and television.

Lest anyone doubt his involvement in the cabinet change, Castro on Wednesday detailed the internal selection process that led to the appointment of Ana Elsa Velazquez as the new education minister.

He also reiterated his role in picking new members of Raul Castro's government which was formally installed on February 24.

Some questions have arisen inside and outside Cuba over which of the Castro brothers is in charge and if they have significant policy differences since Raul Castro provisionally took over running the country after his brother's surgery.

The brothers insist they are working closely together, as they have done for more than half a century since they launched an armed uprising against a U.S.-backed dictator.

Fidel Castro's latest column was likely to add to the confusion. In it he warned against making "shameful concessions to imperialist ideology" even as his brother lifts restrictions to allow greater access to consumer goods and services, and reforms the state-dominated agricultural sector.

"I'll express my modest opinion as long as I am able and desire to do so," the elder Castro wrote.

(Editing by Alan Elsner, Anthony Boadle and Michael Christie)


Email Story IM Story Printable View Yahoo! Buzz RECOMMEND THIS STORY
Recommend It:

Average (0 votes)
» Recommended Stories
Reference URL's