Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Cuban migrant crisis on agenda as Costa Rican president visits Havana

-

Costa Rica's president landed in Havana Sunday amid mounting regional tension over the fate of thousands of Cuban migrants stranded in Costa Rica en route to the United States.

President Luis Guillermo Solis confirmed the issue would be part of his talks with Cuban counterpart Raul Castro but offered few other details on the two-day trip.

"The issue is on the agenda," Solis said at the Cuban capital's Jose Marti International Airport.

"But we also are finishing the process of normalizing relations" with Latin America's only Communist regime, he added.

The growing flow of Cuban migrants through Central America became choked last month when Costa Rica dismantled a people-smuggling ring and Nicaragua, a Cuban ally, closed its border to them.

Cubans fleeing their island overwhelmingly are seeking to reach the United States, which has a longstanding policy of giving them immediate residency and the right to work, if they set foot on US soil.

Many Cubans fear that the United States might drop that policy -- which dates to the Cold War -- and stop accepting them as US-Cuban relations thaw.

That has left 5,000 Cubans stuck in Costa Rica near the Nicaraguan border. An additional 1,200 are blocked in a remote town in Panama in what authorities there have said are unhealthy conditions.

Part of a group of 300 Cuban migrants in a shelter in La Cruz  Guanacaste  Costa Rica  near the bord...
Part of a group of 300 Cuban migrants in a shelter in La Cruz, Guanacaste, Costa Rica, near the border with Nicaragua on November 26, 2015
Ezequiel Becerra, AFP/File

The issue has fanned simmering tensions between Costa Rica and Nicaragua, developing into a regional headache. A recent foreign ministers meeting failed to break the impasse.

An estimated 150 Cubans a day are arriving in Costa Rica in hopes of continuing their voyage overland to the United States.

Their main entry point to South America from Cuba until recently was Ecuador, an ally which up to this month required no visa for Cubans to visit.

But faced with the growing inflow, Ecuador has reimposed a visa requirement.

Meanwhile, Costa Rica has had to scramble to set up refugee centers in school buildings to avoid the situation turning into a full-fledged humanitarian crisis.

Costa Rica’s president landed in Havana Sunday amid mounting regional tension over the fate of thousands of Cuban migrants stranded in Costa Rica en route to the United States.

President Luis Guillermo Solis confirmed the issue would be part of his talks with Cuban counterpart Raul Castro but offered few other details on the two-day trip.

“The issue is on the agenda,” Solis said at the Cuban capital’s Jose Marti International Airport.

“But we also are finishing the process of normalizing relations” with Latin America’s only Communist regime, he added.

The growing flow of Cuban migrants through Central America became choked last month when Costa Rica dismantled a people-smuggling ring and Nicaragua, a Cuban ally, closed its border to them.

Cubans fleeing their island overwhelmingly are seeking to reach the United States, which has a longstanding policy of giving them immediate residency and the right to work, if they set foot on US soil.

Many Cubans fear that the United States might drop that policy — which dates to the Cold War — and stop accepting them as US-Cuban relations thaw.

That has left 5,000 Cubans stuck in Costa Rica near the Nicaraguan border. An additional 1,200 are blocked in a remote town in Panama in what authorities there have said are unhealthy conditions.

Part of a group of 300 Cuban migrants in a shelter in La Cruz  Guanacaste  Costa Rica  near the bord...

Part of a group of 300 Cuban migrants in a shelter in La Cruz, Guanacaste, Costa Rica, near the border with Nicaragua on November 26, 2015
Ezequiel Becerra, AFP/File

The issue has fanned simmering tensions between Costa Rica and Nicaragua, developing into a regional headache. A recent foreign ministers meeting failed to break the impasse.

An estimated 150 Cubans a day are arriving in Costa Rica in hopes of continuing their voyage overland to the United States.

Their main entry point to South America from Cuba until recently was Ecuador, an ally which up to this month required no visa for Cubans to visit.

But faced with the growing inflow, Ecuador has reimposed a visa requirement.

Meanwhile, Costa Rica has had to scramble to set up refugee centers in school buildings to avoid the situation turning into a full-fledged humanitarian crisis.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

The world needs clarity. Let’s hope it happens.

Life

The deaths of three cruise ship passengers during a rare hantavirus outbreak has sparked international alarm.

Business

Image: — © AFPAsian stocks fell on Wednesday as markets digested the lack of progress towards Middle East peace and setbacks that rattled the...

World

Fears that AI could help people design bioweapons or hack into national infrastructure are mutual concerns for Xi Jinping and Trump.