Cubans may get U.S. visas faster
The United States acted to expedite entry into the country for Cubans
awaiting immigrant visas on the island.
Posted on Thu, Nov. 22, 2007
BY HELENA POLEO AND ALFONSO CHARDY
achardy@MiamiHerald.com
In a significant shift in Cuba migration policy, the U.S. government 
announced Wednesday it was creating a new program that would reduce the 
long delays many Cubans experience in securing visas to enter the United 
States.
Under the new Cuban Family Reunification Parole Program, Cubans granted 
permission to travel here by U.S. authorities will no longer have to 
wait in Cuba to receive permanent residency.
They will now be given a travel document that would ''parole'' them into 
the United States, so they can wait here for their green card to be 
delivered to them.
Even with the new program, however, there is no guarantee that Cubans 
with approved parole will enter the country any faster. That's because 
they still must get an exit permit from the Cuban government.
It's unclear whether or not Havana will even recognize the new U.S. 
program. Cuban Interests Section officials in Washington did not return 
a call asking for comment.
Officials with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said they 
hope the new program will discourage Cubans from attempting to illegally 
enter the United States by hiring smugglers or transporting themselves 
across the seas.
Those likely to benefit from the new parole program include siblings and 
adult children of Cuban exiles who are U.S. citizens or spouses, and 
minor children of Cuban green card holders.
Visas are normally available quickly for immediate relatives such as 
spouses, minor children and parents of U.S. citizens. These people are 
specifically excluded from the new program.
The program represents the first major change in U.S. migration policy 
toward Cuba since August 2006, when Homeland Security unveiled a program 
intended partly to encourage Cuban doctors serving in third countries to 
defect to the United States.
The program does not affect the 20,000 U.S. visas made available 
annually to Cubans on the island.
The change does come at a time when U.S. consular officials have failed 
to issue the full allotment earmarked for Cubans on the island. Late 
Wednesday, a U.S. official said that by mid-November the number of 
Cubans with approved petitions who have not received immigrant visas 
stood at about 13,000.
U.S. officials have blamed the Cuban government, saying it has blocked 
necessary materials and personnel from entering the island to process 
the applications.
Cuban officials have rejected U.S. accusations, saying the Bush 
administration has deliberately violated migration accords between the 
two countries dating back to 1994 and 1995.
Under the accords, the United States agreed to issue 20,000 visas a year 
and Cuba agreed to curb unrestricted departures of undocumented Cuban 
migrants. The accords helped end the 1994 rafter exodus, which brought 
37,191 Cuban migrants to the United States.
The agency said it plans to notify the U.S.-based relatives who filed 
the petitions that their relative in Cuba is eligible for a parole 
document and how to request it.
If parole is granted, the agency said, it will issue travel documents in 
Cuba to the prospective immigrant.
Coral Gables immigration attorney Eduardo Soto said the new policy could 
affect thousands of Cuban families, including some of his clients.
Among them: a Cuban couple from Kendall who have spent the last four 
years trying to get their three children -- all adults -- into the 
United States. Two, however, remain in Cuba.
''I got goose bumps when I heard the news, and my wife started crying,'' 
said Arnaldo Almaguel. ``We are very anxious to see our children, and 
they are crazy about coming here.''
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