Oman Daily Observer

Panama drops off unwanted Cubans at border

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PANAMA CITY: Panama on Thursday dropped a group of 71 unwanted Cubans at its border with Costa Rica in an operation highlighti­ng a pass-the-buck strategy between Central American countries struggling to stem the flow of US-bound migrants.

The Cubans were driven by bus from a holding centre in the east — where they had been kept since crossing from Colombia — to the Costa Rican border in the west, local media reports in Panama said.

Panamanian officials did not confirm they organised the transfer, but one of the Cubans told the Panamanian newspaper La Estrella they were woken at dawn to board waiting buses.

President Juan Carlos Varela told reporters the Cubans had to leave the country or face deportatio­n to Cuba or Colombia.

Costa Rica’s Communicat­ion Minister, Mauricio Herrera, said that the Cubans would not be permitted entry.

Any found illegally crossing into the country would be returned to Panama, he said.

But the head of the UN’s Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration in Costa Rica, Roeland de Wilde, said half the Cubans had already entered the country on Thursday.

“We have reliable informatio­n that indicates the Cubans have entered Costa Rica with people smugglers,” he said.

The IOM urged migrants “not to put themselves at risk through the dangerous smuggling business,” he added.

Central America is a corridor for Cubans and other migrants trekking overland to try to get to the United States.

Some 25,000 Cubans passed through the region in 2015.

But their obstacles have since greatly increased.

Nicaragua closed its border to undocument­ed Cuban migrants in late 2015, forcing Costa Rica, then Panama — both upstream of the migration flow — to follow suit. In January this year, the United States scrapped a decades-old policy giving Cubans preferred immigrant status.

Hundreds have since been deported.

Although the numbers passing through Central America have decreased, Costa Rica and Panama — both relatively stable and prosperous — fear they may become alternativ­e destinatio­ns for Cubans. — AFP

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