Illegal Cuban migration, after years of decline, is up again
Theories abound as to why the number of undocumented Cuban migrants to
the United States rose in the past year.
Tracking the numbers
The number of undocumented Cuban migrants stopped at sea or who landed
on U.S. shores has risen sharply after dropping in recent years.
2010: 831
2011: 1,696
By Alfonso Chardy and Juan O. Tamayo
jtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com
Reversing a three-year trend downward, the number of undocumented Cubans
intercepted at sea or who reached U.S. shores in the past 12 months
soared by more than 100 percent — sparking questions about the reasons
behind the new trend.
About 1,700 Cubans were interdicted or landed in fiscal year 2011, which
ended Sept. 30, according to figures compiled by El Nuevo Herald from
Homeland Security Department agencies. That compares to 831 in fiscal 2010.
U.S. Coast Guard interdictions at sea rose from 422 to 1,000, while
landings on U.S. shores climbed from 409 to almost 700. Meanwhile,
arrivals at U.S. border posts — almost all from Mexico — barely changed
from 6,219 to 6,300.
The figures reflected the first hike since fiscal year 2007, when the
total hit 19,710, up from 16,226 for fiscal 2006. The number dropped
back to 16,260 in 2008 and plummeted to 8,113 the following year.
While the uptick over the past year would seem relatively modest, the
reversal of the downward trend and the growth of 14 percent in the
overall figure has triggered much speculation on exactly what drove the
increase.
Arturo Cobo, a Key West businessman who is in regular contact with some
of the undocumented migrants and their families, said that the island's
stalled economy is leading many Cubans to try to seek better lives abroad.
Havana activist Elizardo Sánchez agreed. "The economy is worse each day.
Less money, less food, less everything," said the head of the illegal
but tolerated Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation.
Havana blogger Orlando Luis Pardo Lazo said perhaps the uptick is simply
a part of "the natural tendency of the Cuban anthropology — to escape —
a process in which the numbers drop but the pressures accumulate, and
then the numbers grow."
Raúl Castro's government also may be "turning a blind eye to some of the
departures as an escape valve for the growing discontent," Cobo noted,
referring to the increasing number of dissident protests over the past
two years.
Also possible, he added, is that the easing of the U.S. economic crisis
made it easier for Cuban Americans to pay the fees demanded by smugglers
to bring relatives and friends from the island, usually about $10,000 a
head.
The increase in attempts by undocumented Cubans to reach the United
States appears to be in line with the Cuban government's own figures,
which show that legal emigration grew by 3 percent from 2009 to 2010.
With a population of 11.2 million, Cuba recorded 38,165 legal
emigrations last year, compared to 36,564 in 2009, according to a report
this summer by the National Office for Statistics (ONE).
Indeed, about 318,000 Cubans arrived in the United States both legally
and illegally between 2000 and 2009, according to a recent study by
Jorge Duany, a professor at the University of Puerto Rico who tracks the
Cuban Diaspora.
There's little doubt that large numbers of Cubans want to leave the
communist-ruled island, according to a 2009 dispatch written by U.S.
diplomats in Havana and provided by WikiLeaks to McClatchy, which owns
El Nuevo Herald.
"Emigration remains a virtual obsession with many Cubans, especially,
but by no means exclusively, with the young," the cable noted. "Much of
the Cuban public [is] still eager to leave the island."
Cuba's emigration flows have varied widely, with massive spikes in 1980,
when the Mariel boatlift brought 125,000 refugees to U.S. shores, and in
1994, when the so-called "Rafter Crisis" created 37,191 migrants.
But it's much more difficult to figure out why the numbers of
undocumented Cuban emigrants rose from fiscal year 2003 to fiscal 2007,
started dropping in fiscal 2009 and have now risen again.
When the numbers were dropping, analysts argued that was due to the U.S.
economic crisis and the hardships paying the smugglers' fees; improved
patrolling by the U.S. and Cuban Coast Guards; and stepped up U.S. and
Cuban prosecutions of people smugglers.
The WikiLeaks cable noted that the Mexican Embassy in Havana had
reported 31 Mexicans were jailed in Cuba in 2009, "all but a handful
convicted on migrant smuggling charges."
But the cable argued that the U.S. economic crisis may not have been a
factor because Cuban migration "historically has not been strongly
influenced by economic fluctuations in the United States."
Instead, the dispatch claimed, the main reason for the drop was the
expanded opportunities for legal migration created by changes in U.S.
visa procedures and Spain's citizenship requirements.
The U.S. Cuban Family Reunification Parole program, designed to expedite
the issuance of visas and residency permits, cleared a huge backlog of
applications for legal entry, according to the cable.
And a new Spanish law allowed tens of thousands of Cuban descendants of
Spanish grandparents to apply for Spanish citizenship — which brings
with it the right to leave Cuba without the exit permits required of
Cuban citizens.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/10/09/v-fullstory/2445346/illegal-cuban-migration-after.html
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