Legal path to US from Cuba still complicated
By ALICIA A. CALDWELL | Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Cuba's surprise decision to make it easier for
citizens to leave the country doesn't mean Cubans can book tickets on
commercial planes and head for Miami.
Would-be immigrants and tourists still need permission from the U.S.
government to enter America legally. With a multiyear wait for a visa,
the average Cuban may not be leaving home any time soon.
"This may end up being ado about nothing," said a Cuban-immigration
expert, Jose Azel of the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and
Cuban American Studies.
A State Department spokeswoman, Victoria Nuland, said Tuesday that the
U.S. welcomes "any reforms that'll allow Cubans to depart from and
return to their country freely. We remain committed to the migration
accords under which our two countries support and promote safe, legal
and orderly migration. Our own visa requirements remain unchanged."
Under those 1994 accords, Washington agreed to stop allowing Cubans
caught at sea to enter the U.S. In 1995 the U.S. government began its
"wet-foot, dry-foot" policy that allows anyone who makes it to shore to
stay, while those caught at sea are turned back.
Since then, thousands of Cubans who made the treacherous trip across the
Straits of Florida have been rewarded with entry into the United States.
Unlike illegal immigrants from almost any other country, most Cubans not
only can stay but also seek legal residency and eventually citizenship.
The welcoming policy isn't just for Cubans who arrive by sea. In recent
years, thousands of would-be immigrants have opted to hire smugglers to
ferry them to Mexico, where they head over land to Texas. These "dusty
foot" Cubans are allowed into the U.S. after medical screenings and
background checks.
Azel said the end of the Cuban exit visa program "isn't likely to be a
free for all" exodus like the 1980 Mariel boatlift, which lasted six
months and ended with about 125,000 immigrants, including criminals and
mental patients, making it to Florida.
Azel noted that nearly every Latin American country, including Mexico,
requires an entry visa for Cubans.
Cuban President Raul Castro's decision was announced in the Communist
newspaper Granma this week. In an accompanying editorial, the newspaper
blamed the decades-old travel restrictions on U.S. attempts to topple
the island's government, plant spies and recruit its best-educated citizens.
The new rules, which will go into effect in January, still let the
government deny travel for reasons of defense and national security.
The reaction to Castro's decision was mixed. People in Cuba and Miami's
exile community wondered how significant the change will turn out to be.
Dissident Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez took to Twitter to share her
concern that the Cuban government might start denying passports to
control who leaves.
"I have the suitcase ready to travel. ... Let's see if I get a flight
for Jan. 14, 2013, to try out the new law," tweeted Sanchez, who said
she has been denied an exit visa 20 times over the past five years.
Havana-born Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Florida Republican, called it
"nothing more than Raul Castro's desperate attempts to fool the world
into thinking that Cuba is changing."
For Cubans who have relatives living in the United States and want to
leave the island, the end of the travel restrictions will likely make it
easier to emigrate. Under the U.S. government's "Cuban Family
Reunification Parole Program," Cuban immigrants living in the U.S. can
sponsor relatives to move to the United States. If a regular visa is not
available, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services can opt to let them
in anyway.
Immediate family members of immigrants already here, including spouses
and unmarried children, are granted entry as long their sponsorship
application is approved.
As part of the U.S. government's plan to reunite Cuban families, a
minimum of 20,000 travel documents are made available annually.
According to U.S. government statistics, about 43,000 visas were issued
to Cubans in the most recent budget year, including both tourist and
immigrant visas.
___
Associated Press writers Peter Orsi and Andrea Rodriguez in Havana
contributed to this report.
http://news.yahoo.com/legal-path-us-cuba-still-complicated-164947596.html;_ylt=A2KJ3CYw835Qtn8ANfHQtDMD
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