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More Cubans seized off US coast | More Cubans seized off US coast |
(30 minutes later) | |
The US Coast Guard says it has intercepted almost 3,000 Cuban migrants off the Florida coast this year, the highest figure for more than a decade. | The US Coast Guard says it has intercepted almost 3,000 Cuban migrants off the Florida coast this year, the highest figure for more than a decade. |
It says more Cubans are paying gangs to try to reach Florida on fast launches rather than using home-made rafts. | It says more Cubans are paying gangs to try to reach Florida on fast launches rather than using home-made rafts. |
The US is starting a temporary visa programme for Cubans to cope with delays in issuing regular papers. | The US is starting a temporary visa programme for Cubans to cope with delays in issuing regular papers. |
But experts say the situation is not comparable to a mass exodus from the island in 1994. | But experts say the situation is not comparable to a mass exodus from the island in 1994. |
About 37,000 Cubans were arrested at sea that year in what became known as the "rafters' crisis". | |
As of Tuesday, the Coast Guard had intercepted 2,988 Cubans this year - surpassing the figure for 2005. | |
Coast Guard spokesman Luis Diaz said that - rather than reflecting a sharp rise in migration - the figures showed the US authorities were doing a more effective job. | Coast Guard spokesman Luis Diaz said that - rather than reflecting a sharp rise in migration - the figures showed the US authorities were doing a more effective job. |
"For us, this means that our units and the national security agencies are working harder and intercepting more migrants than in previous years," he told the BBC. | "For us, this means that our units and the national security agencies are working harder and intercepting more migrants than in previous years," he told the BBC. |
Visa changes | |
Washington currently allows 20,000 Cubans to join relatives in the US every year, but they experience long bureaucratic delays while waiting on the island. | |
The new system - which the US immigration service hopes will "discourage dangerous and irregular maritime migration" - means that successful applicants won't need full resident status before leaving for Florida. | |
Cuban citizens are marginalised... so their only hopes is to leave the country Omar LopezExile spokesman | |
The latest figures are causing controversy among Cuba watchers in the United States. | The latest figures are causing controversy among Cuba watchers in the United States. |
"There are obviously more rafters," said Omar Lopez, an exile from the Miami-based Cuban-American National Foundation. | |
"Cuban citizens are marginalised from political, economic and social life - so their only hope is to leave the country." | "Cuban citizens are marginalised from political, economic and social life - so their only hope is to leave the country." |
The Centre for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami warned in a recent report that "a silent, but increasingly obvious new mass immigration from Castro's Cuba could be under way". | The Centre for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami warned in a recent report that "a silent, but increasingly obvious new mass immigration from Castro's Cuba could be under way". |
But Phil Peters of the Lexington Institute, a think-tank, said there was no evidence of an imminent crisis. | But Phil Peters of the Lexington Institute, a think-tank, said there was no evidence of an imminent crisis. |
Experts say a key factor in migration from Cuba is Washington's so-called "Wet Foot, Dry Foot" policy. | Experts say a key factor in migration from Cuba is Washington's so-called "Wet Foot, Dry Foot" policy. |
This allows any Cuban who reaches US soil to stay in America, but means that most migrants intercepted at sea are sent back to the island. | This allows any Cuban who reaches US soil to stay in America, but means that most migrants intercepted at sea are sent back to the island. |
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