U.S. repeal of friendly migrant policy makes waves in Cuban port city - Action News
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U.S. repeal of friendly migrant policy makes waves in Cuban port city

News that the U.S. has repealed a migration policy favourable to Cubans spread quickly in Cardenas, a coastal city where balseros, or rafters, regularly attempt to make the treacherous 150-kilometre journey across the Florida Strait.

Lazaro Marrero, 33, says he'd planned to make a fourth attempt to make the crossing

Cardenas, Cuba, resident Lazaro Marrero, a 33-year-old taxi driver, was planning to build a boat and attempt to make it to Florida. His plans are on hold after the U.S. this week ended a migration policy favourable to Cubans. (Anwar Ali)

News thatthe U.S. has repealed a migration policy favourable to Cubansspread quickly in Cardenas, a coastal city where balseros, or rafters, regularly attempt to make the treacherous 150-kilometre journey across the Florida Strait.

On Thursday, President Barack Obamaended a long-standing policythat allowed any Cuban who makes it to U.S. soil to stay and become a legal resident after one year.Cubans captured at sea were returned to the Caribbean island.

"Effective immediately, Cuban nationals who attempt to enter the United States illegally and do not qualify for humanitarian relief will be subject to removal, consistent with U.S. law and enforcement priorities," Obama said in a statement.

Echeverria Park, in the Cuban city of Cardenas, is where locals gather. (Anwar Ali)

Cardenas, a city of more than 100,000 residents, where horse-drawn carriages rule the roads, is also the childhood home of Elian Gonzalez, who at age five became Cuba's most famous rafter after he was innocently thrust into a political tug-of-war.

Gonzalez, now 23, was found alone at sea in 1999. What ensued was a protracted custody battle between his Miami relatives and his father in Cuba. He also became a pawn in the political warfare between exiles in the U.S. and Cubans loyal to Fidel Castro.

The two-decades-long "wet foot, dry foot" policy as the special provision added to the U.S.'s Cuban Adjustment Act is colloquially known was instated by the Clinton administration partly as a political tactic to antagonize Castrobut also to curb the number of Cuban migrants, whose massive exodusin 1980 reached a crisispoint when Castro opened the floodgates to citizens who wanted toleave, many of whom were convicts released from jail.

7,411 Cubans intercepted

The policy change does not preclude Cubans from applying through conventional channels, just like citizens of other countries.

While the truenumber of Cubans who attempt to flee by boat might be difficult to determine, the U.S. Coast Guard said7,411 Cubans were either intercepted at sea or landed on American soil in a one-year period up to Sept. 30, 2016.

Of those, 5,396 were caught in the water more than double the figure the previous year.

The number of those who made it to land in each period remained stable, an indication that the U.S. Coast Guard may have been more vigilant of a spike in traffic amid speculation the unprecedented privileges might be withdrawn once once the U.S. agreed to a dtente with Cuba on December 17, 2014.

The move to revoke "wet foot, dry foot" comes as Cuba struggles with recessionary pressures for the first time in years, amid a tapering of subsidized oil from ally Venezuela.

Schoolchildren and other residents of Cardenas, Cuba, line the streets as a military jeep tows a trailer carrying the remains of former president Fidel Castro on November 30, 2016. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

The economic pinch has intensifiedthe will for many Cubans to leave the island. But Cardenas resident Lazaro Marrero now says his plan to get on a boat in 10 days is in limbo.

"I wanted to go to help my family and work," a clearly distraught Marrero, 33,told CBC News. "The economic situation has obligated me."

Marrero, a driver for a state-owned taxi company who makes roughly the equivalent of$20 US a month, said he was in the midst of collecting the $3,500 he believed he'd need to build a boat and buy a motorso that he and his wife, along with at least a dozen others, could make the trek to Florida.

It would have been his fourth attempt. The first time, he said, he didn't get far before the Cuban border patrol caught him. The second time, the U.S. Coast Guard intercepted his boat just 15 kilometres from Florida's coast. The last time he tried, the boat's motor broke and he was forced to row back to shore, one more setback in his determination to find a better life.

'A lot of people go and they die'

While Marrero has survived, the perils of the sea have claimed many casualties. Marrero said his cousin left 10 days ago and he's not heard from him since.

And even though some like him are willing to take the risk, the high-stakes venture to Florida isn't one that all Cubans are willing to make, or feel should be encouraged.

"A lot of people go and they die. They get lost at sea. Many have lost a son or an entire family," saidJulia Maria Ortiz,58.

Elian Gonzalez, seen here at a gala for Castro's 90th birthday on Aug. 13, 2016, was 5 years old when he left Cardenas for Florida and became shipwrecked. The U.S. courts said he was too young to seek asylum and ordered he return to his father in Cuba. (Ismael Francisco/Cubadebate/Associated Press)

Sitting in Echeverria Park, in the centre of Cardnenas, Ortiz saidthosewho'd like to live abroad should go through conventional immigration channels, although she acknowledges that many Cubans don't have the financial means to do so.

"I think it's the best that they could have done," said 17-year-old Lisandra Daniele Albeo, a dental hygiene student, of the decision to endthe wet foot, dry foot policy.

Trump unlikely to restore policy

The clampdown on Cuban migrants comes a week ahead of the inauguration ceremony for U.S. president-elect Donald Trump, who has promised to take a harder stance on immigration.

While Trump has more than once threatened to unwind Obama's diplomatic efforts with Cuba,this move would align with his campaign rhetoric, and if it holds up, the quest for thousands of Cubans to transplant themselves becomes all the more elusive.

In 1995, under the U.S.-Cuba Immigration Agreement, under which the wet foot, dry foot policy falls, the U.S. governmentbegan to reserve at least 20,000 visasper yearfor Cuban applicants, and those will still be available to Cubans through the conventional immigrationprocess.

As of 2015, there were 2,106,501 U.S. residents of Cuban origin, the latest figures from the U.S. Census Bureau show.