11/16/15, "Cuban Migrant Wave Prompts Nicaragua to Bolster Border Force," Bloomberg, Michael D. McDonald
"Nicaragua dispatched its military and police to help close its
southern border in a dispute with Costa Rica over the passage of Cuban
migrants on their way to the U.S.
Costa Rica’s decision on
Saturday to grant seven-day transit visas to 1,200 Cuban migrants who
entered the country through Panama “violated national sovereignty,”
Nicaragua’s government said in a statement over the weekend. Nicaraguan
troops and riot police fired tear gas at people attempting to enter on
Sunday in what Costa Rica called a "humanitarian crisis."
Authorities
re-opened the border Monday morning to tourists and merchants. Some 450
Cuban migrants were transferred to shelters in Costa Rica while the
rest remained at the border checkpoint. Nicaragua’s ambassador to the
United Nations, Maria Rubiales, said Monday that Costa Rica had violated
the UN Charter and international law by not consulting Nicaragua over
the passage of the migrants.
Costa
Rican President Luis Guillermo Solis met with legislators and cabinet
members today to discuss the influx of Cuban migrants crossing the
country en route to the U.S. through Central America. His government
said in a statement it is working with the UN refugee agency to
"guarantee the protection of the lives of these persons" and that
officials have sent food and bedding to the border.
The number of
Cubans seeking to migrate to the U.S. has spiked since the two countries
began working in December last year to normalize relations after more
than five decades. Almost 28,000 Cubans entered the U.S. in the first
nine months of the 2015 fiscal year, according to the Pew Research Center,
citing U.S. Census data. Cuban migrants have historically used Central
America as a land bridge to the U.S., where under current law they are
usually offered the chance to apply for residency after a year."
...................
11/16/15, "Nicaragua turns back Cuban migrants to Costa Rica," BBC
"The Cubans said they had flown to Ecuador from where they had made their way north through Colombia and Panama to Costa Rica.
They reported being stranded in Costa Rica after the trafficking ring
which they had paid to get them to the US was broken up by the
authorities.
On Saturday, Costa Rica issued seven-day transit
visas to more than 1,700 Cubans detained after crossing illegally into
Costa Rica from Panama.
Nicaragua's left-wing government, which
has close ties to Cuba, said that move had "unleashed a humanitarian
crisis with serious consequences for our region".
The
Cubans told Nicaraguan media they had waited for hours to be granted
Nicaraguan transit permits before getting impatient and entering the
Penas Blancas border post by force.
They continued on foot on the
Panamerican Highway north, where they were met by Nicaraguan security
forces who took them back to Costa Rica....
Another migrant told Reuters news agency that "we don't want to stay
in any of these countries, our aim is to reach the United States, that's
our objective".
The number of Cubans leaving the Communist-run
island has risen since last December when Cuba and the US announced a
thaw in their relations.
Historically, Cubans reaching US soil have been given preferential treatment over migrants from other countries.
Under the 1966 Cuban Adjustment Act, they can be granted asylum much more easily than applicants from other countries.
But
with relations between the former Cold War foes improving, many Cubans
fear this policy, which dates back to the Cold War, could be abolished.
According
to US Customs and Border Protection figures, more than 25,000 Cubans
entered the US through its southern border between October 2014 and
September 2015." map from BBC
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