Saturday, September 13, 2014

Twenty years after Cuban raft exodus, they keep coming

Twenty years after Cuban raft exodus, they keep coming
By David Adams,
Reuters

MIAMI (Reuters) - Alicia Garcia vividly recalls her rescue at sea 20
years ago during a mass exodus from Cuba, a dramatic event that changed
the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and reshaped relations
between the communist-run island and the United States.

"We didn't think we'd make it. We prayed, and put ourselves in God's
hands," she said of her six-day ordeal clinging with five others to a
raft made of truck inner tubes and rope.

Illegal departures by sea from Cuba are on the rise again, U.S.
officials say, with more than 2,000 migrants picked up by the U.S. Coast
Guard over the last 12 months. That is the highest rate in six years.

Many more are passing undetected, mostly headed west aboard flimsy
home-made vessels in a risky bid to cross the Caribbean to Honduras, in
hopes of getting across the Mexico-U.S. border.

Late last month 17 Cubans were rescued by the Mexican navy after almost
a month at sea, 20 days without food. Details are unclear, but more than
a dozen others may have died from dehydration - the survivors forced to
throw their bodies overboard.

The town of Manzanillo in eastern Cuba, where most of the victims are
from, planned a church Mass on Friday night.

"My wife, she can't bring herself to tell me what really happened. It's
too terrible," said Jose Caballero, husband of one of the survivors, who
left Cuba via a similar route in December and now lives in Texas.

ECONOMY, LONG DELAYS, FUEL EXODUS

According to the latest U.S. figures, more than 14,000 Cubans have
crossed the southwestern U.S. border illegally since Oct. 1, almost
triple the number four years ago.

The spike is attributed to delays of up to five years for Cubans seeking
to emigrate legally to join relatives in the United States. Economic
reforms designed to open up Cuba's state-controlled system and create
private sector jobs have also failed to improve living conditions for
most people.

"We left (Cuba) because there are no jobs or the basic items for
living," said Angel, a former fishing boat captain who reached Honduras
with 11 others aboard a home-made boat last week after a two-week
journey via the Cayman Islands.

The boat was built clandestinely with cannibalized parts, including a
car engine, a propeller and aluminum sheets sealed together with resin,
he said.

It wasn't much different in 1994, said Garcia, except on that occasion
Cuba lifted restrictions, opening the flood gates for anyone who wanted
to jump on a raft.

That summer, between Aug. 12 and Sept. 13, some 31,000 Cubans were
detained at sea by U.S. ships. It was the largest exodus since the 1980
Mariel boatlift that brought 120,000 Cubans to Miami.

The 1994 crisis led to a major shift in U.S.-Cuba policy and an accord
under which Washington agreed to grant visas to 20,000 Cuban migrants a
year.

As a result, since 1995 more than 600,000 Cubans have emigrated to the
United States, the largest flow since Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution.

The 1994 crisis also led to the establishment of a so-called "wet foot,
dry foot policy," under which Cuban migrants who make it onto U.S. soil
are allowed to remain, while those intercepted at sea are turned back.

Rafters have kept coming in smaller numbers, though these days they make
few political or media waves.

LIKE FALL OF BERLIN WALL

A series of seminars and exhibitions are being held to mark the 1994
exodus. An exhibition at the Spanish Cultural Center in Miami, opening
on Saturday, features the work of Willy Castellanos, a young
photographer in Havana in 1994 who chronicled the exodus as homes were
ripped apart to build rafts, lowered by pulleys onto the street below.

"Living in Havana at that time and watching the exodus felt like the
fall of the Berlin Wall. It was the end of the utopia, the socialist
model we grew up with," he said.

Garcia said she will never forget the five months she spent in 1994 at a
makeshift refugee camp at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. naval base before
making it to Miami.

She has not been back to Cuba to visit the grandparents who raised her.

Garcia and other rafters say the 1994 exodus has not been fully
appreciated by Cubans who arrived in Miami in the 1960s, or on the
Mariel boatlift.

"The Cubans who came before, in 1980, were never in agreement with the
revolution. We were supposed to be different," added Garcia, born in
1974. "We were the children of the revolution."



(Reporting by David Adams, editing by Jill Serjeant and Dan Grebler)

Source: Twenty years after Cuban raft exodus, they keep coming - Chicago
Tribune -
http://www.chicagotribune.com/sns-rt-us-usa-florida-cuba-raft-20140912-story.html

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