Trump administration yet to talk to Cuba about migration – vice foreign minister

Trump administration yet to talk to Cuba  about migration – vice foreign minister

HAVANA, Cuba--Cuba has yet to discuss migration with the Trump administration, Vice Foreign Minister Carlos Fernandez de Cossio told Reuters, even as the US ploughs ahead with a vast immigration crackdown that could leave many Cubans at risk of deportation.

The Trump administration is planning to revoke legal status from some 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans allowed to enter the US legally under temporary humanitarian "parole programmes" launched under former US President Joe Biden, Reuters reported last week.

The move under consideration would be part of a broader effort to end Biden-era parole programmes that allowed some 1.8 million migrants to enter the United States.

But the Trump administration has not yet broached the subject of migration or any potential increase in deportations with Cuba, de Cossio told Reuters in an interview late Tuesday at Cuba’s Foreign Ministry in Havana.

"There has been no request of that nature from the US government," de Cossio said. "We have yet to even sit down to discuss if that would be a possibility."

The White House, the US State Department and the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Under existing migratory accords, which date back to the 1980s, Cuba has routinely accepted immigrants deported from the US by air and by sea.

Two such repatriation flights have landed in Havana since January, de Cossio said. Most carry fewer than 100 deportees.

But large-scale deportations of Cubans initially admitted lawfully into the United States were never contemplated in the migratory accords between the two countries, the vice minister said.

"When the agreements were made, the possibility of the United States admitting people, and then ‘unadmitting’ them, was not at the time seen as something reasonable. So anything [like that – Ed.] would need to be discussed."

De Cossio declined to say whether Cuba would be willing to cooperate with such an arrangement, calling it "unrealistic and unfair".

Cuba has long alleged the US stokes mass migration by attacking its economy with sanctions while at the same time incentivising Cuban migration with laws that offer them a clearer path to citizenship than other nationalities.

"They didn’t tear down a wall, they didn’t have to jump a fence to get into the US, they were invited," de Cossio said.

The United States says Cuba is to blame for its migration crisis, accusing the island’s communist-run government of mismanaging the economy and violating human rights.

Cubans rank among the top groups crossing the US-Mexico border both through Biden-era legal entry programmes and illegally, in recent years.

Upwards of one million Cubans have left the island since 2020, roughly a tenth of the population, an exodus demographers say has few parallels outside of war.

The US and Cuba last met to discuss migration in December, before President Donald Trump took office, and are next slated to meet in April in Washington, though de Cossio said the Trump administration had yet to confirm that meeting. ~ Reuters ~

The Daily Herald

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