Published Sunday, August 27, 2006
U.S.-Cuba Relations Worries Some Exiles
By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ
The Associated Press
MIAMI -- Jorge de Cardenas emigrated from Cuba in 1958, worked with a 
CIA-backed university group against Fidel Castro and spent years as a 
successful Miami lobbyist. He should have been overjoyed at news this 
month that Castro was finally handing off power.
But that change now casts a shadow over de Cardenas, 61. He spent a year 
in prison for obstruction of justice in connection with a 1990s Miami 
corruption scandal. Because of that conviction, like more than 30,000 
other Cubans in the U.S., he would be eligible for deportation if the 
two countries were to resume relations, according to Homeland Security's 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Under federal law, immigrants who have committed certain felonies are 
automatically deportable, but Cubans have long been exempt because the 
two countries lack a comprehensive immigration agreement.
De Cardenas said his wife, children and grandchildren, all U.S. 
citizens, worry about what will happen to him.
"My family, they talk about it all the time, the possibility that I 
could be deported," said de Cardenas, who is now a publicist and consultant.
A change in U.S.-Cuban relations could also spell an end to the minimum 
20,000 visas Cubans are guaranteed each year, and it could kill the 
so-called wet/dry immigration policy, which generally allows Cubans who 
reach the U.S. to remain.
Department of Homeland Security officials declined to talk about future 
policy revisions.
"It's something we're not ready to discuss in public until the situation 
(in Cuba) changes," said Joanna Gonzalez of DHS, who added the 
department is concerned that any statement it makes could spark mass 
migration from the island.
So far this year, the U.S. Coast Guard has interdicted more than 1,600 
Cubans at sea, up slightly from last year. That includes about 100 who 
have been stopped since an ailing Castro temporarily transferred power 
to his brother July 31.
In response, President Bush earlier this month relaxed immigration rules 
for some Cubans while tightening them for those who attempt to come 
illegally.
De Cardenas wouldn't have to worry about deportation if he'd become a 
U.S. citizen, but he said he maintained his Cuban citizenship because he 
always hoped to return to the island.
His lawyer, Linda Osberg-Braun, said he is not alone in opting not to 
become a citizen and thus leaving himself at risk for deportation.
"A lot of times it was because of patriotism and because they planned to 
go back. And sometimes they just didn't know what they were supposed to 
do," she said.
Orlando Boquete didn't have those options. The 51-year-old Cuban 
immigrant spent 13 years behind bars before DNA testing exonerated him 
from a 1982 sexual assault. But Boquete, who was released from prison 
Monday, also escaped from prison and admitted committing several 
felonies including burglary while he was a fugitive. Although ICE 
officials have agreed not to request his deportation, those crimes bar 
him from becoming a citizen, meaning he would remain at risk for 
deportation if the U.S. and Cuba renewed relations.
Immigration lawyer Wilfredo Allen said an immediate push for mass 
deportation is unlikely because it would take years for the two 
countries to reach a broad immigration accord.
Immigration expert Ira Kurzban said an end to the 20,000 visa minimum, a 
guarantee few other nations have, would probably come first.
Kurzban also said that a resumption of relations would likely spell an 
end to Cuban Adjustment Act, which allows most Cubans in the U.S. to 
become residents after one year.
"It's really a Cold War vestige that's been perpetrated and perpetuated 
by various U.S. administrations but is an anomaly in law, even in 
refugee law," Kurzban said.
For now Boquete and de Cardenas, like others in their situation, try not 
to think that far down the road.
"I hope it doesn't happen," de Cardenas said, "but if it does, there's 
nothing I can do."
http://www.theledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060827/NEWS/608260504/1004/RSS&source=RSS
 
 
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