Pages

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Seized Cuban migrants reach Texas

Seized Cuban migrants reach Texas
Posted on Thu, Jun. 19, 2008
By JULIE WATSON
Associated Press Writer

MEXICO CITY --
A group of 18 Cubans crossed into Texas in good health more than a week
after heavily armed masked men seized them from immigration agents in
southern Mexico, the Attorney General's office said Thursday.

The hijacking of a bus carrying the illegal migrants to a detention
center shows how violent criminal organizations are increasingly
smuggling Cubans into the United States through Mexico.

Cuba's ambassador to Mexico Manuel Aguilera blamed a Miami-based mafia
for the attack. Thomas Shannon, a top State Department official in
Washington, also expressed concern, saying this week that all Cubans
sneaking out of the communist-run island through Mexico are being
managed by professional traffickers.

Few details have been made public about how the 18 Cubans made it
through Mexico, or about the fate of 19 other migrants who were on the
bus seized by six gunmen in southern Chiapas state.

The assailants drove off with 33 Cubans and four Central Americans after
forcing seven unarmed immigration agents and two drivers off the bus,
which was found abandoned hours later along a jungle highway.

Nine Mexican immigration officials and the two bus drivers have been
detained for questioning, the Attorney General's office said, and
authorities are searching across Mexico for the missing migrants, said
Raul Vazquez, an official with Mexico's Migration Institute in Chiapas.

The 18 Cubans walked across an international bridge in Hidalgo, Texas
and surrendered to the U.S. Border Patrol. Under the U.S. government's
"wet-foot, dry-foot" policy, Cubans intercepted at sea are turned back
to Cuba, but those who reach U.S. soil are usually allowed to stay.

Questioned in Texas, some of the Cubans said the assailants took them to
a house in the Gulf port of Veracruz where photographs were taken and
glued to apparently fake immigration documents, which helped them get
past military checkpoints, the Attorney General's office said.

Then, the Cubans said they were split up, given money and put on public
buses to the border, where they were given more money before crossing
into Texas. Authorities didn't identify who helped the Cubans along the way.

U.S. Border Patrol officials said they had no information, and a U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement official, who was not authorized to
be named, would only confirm that 18 Cubans had turned themselves in.

The migrants said they left Cuba on a makeshift boat and were picked up
at sea by two men in a yacht who offered to take them to the United
States. They yacht was then intercepted off Cancun by the Mexican navy,
and the two men were detained on allegations of people smuggling.

Both men, Nairobi Claro Ortega and Noriel Veloz, are Cubans who have
recently been living in Miami. They turned down an offer of bail, saying
they feared for their lives, the Attorney General's office said.

Friends of Ortega's in Miami said he came from Cuba through Mexico
himself two years ago, and called this week from jail to say he's OK.

In recent years, several alleged people smugglers have turned up dead in
the Yucatan Peninsula, which lies just 120 miles (190 kilometers)
southwest of Cuba. Mexican authorities say Cuban-American human
trafficking rings operate in and around Cancun.

For decades, Cubans quietly passed through Mexico to avoid being caught
by U.S. Coast Guard vessels. But this flow of human cargo has increased
substantially - more than 1,000 Cuban migrants have been detained in
Mexico this year compared to 1,359 for 2007.

"We know there's a mafia that has connections from Miami to Mexico to
Havana," said Ramon Saul Sanchez, who runs the nonprofit Democracy
Movement group that helps Cubans arriving in Miami.

Relatives in Miami usually pay the smuggling fee, which has risen to
US$15,000 a person, Sanchez said. And when Cubans can't pay, smugglers
arrange for them to work off the debt.

"Then they keep them like slaves," Sanchez said. "There's a whole
industry developed around the division and the pain of the Cuban family."
E. Eduardo Castillo in Mexico City; Manuel De La Cruz in Chiapas;
Christopher Sherman in McAllen, Texas; and Laura Wides-Munoz in Miami
contributed to this report.

http://www.miamiherald.com/948/story/575830.html

No comments: