Boston Herald

To end Cuban mass migration, push for Cuba’s freedom

- By Fabiola Santiago Fabiola Santiago is a columnist for the Miami Herald.

A new generation of Cubans is dying in the Florida Straits in a bid to flee a brutally repressive regime — and poverty, too.

A trail of makeshift rafts and rickety boats dots high seas. A superman rides a surfboard some 90+ miles to the Keys. And, at the U.S. border with Mexico, a jampacked queue of people asking for political asylum replaces the long wait for rationed food at the government-owned bodega in Cuba.

Desperate Cubans in risky flight — they are new protagonis­ts in an old, sad story, a 63year-old story that no longer stirs emotions in this country. But it should, especially given the rightful passion and outrage with which Americans are defending Ukraine.

But not all bids for freedom seem to be considered of equal value and merit — not even when both Cuba and Ukraine pose the same threat to the United States in the deranged mind of one man, Vladimir Putin, who’s pining for the Soviet Union era.

Americans think the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis that brought the two superpower­s to the brink of war is a thing of the past.

Lost to Donald Trump and President Biden’s sanctions, Cuba is out of sight, out of mind. The pleas of advocates for attention to human-rights violations, censorship and judiciary secrecy are lost on American and European allies.

Armed Ukrainians, on the other hand, are admired for their courage to stay and fight at whatever cost. The Russian atrocities coming to light in the aftermath are horrific. Ukrainians’ deaths defending their country are truly heroic, a sacrifice that has pushed Russia back.

We Cubans almost always disappoint.

Whatever the circumstan­ce, we choose exile. This time, in the face of puppet dictator Miguel Diaz-Canel’s issuance of 10-, 20and 30-year prison sentences to young Cubans for the crime of truth-telling during unpreceden­ted massive protests last July 11.

And the country next door isn’t watching, isn’t outraged, isn’t lobbying Biden for anything other than to send humanitari­an aid to the enemy, to return the pleasure of visiting the island and the right of American businesses to make a buck off the backs of Cubans like Europeans do.

Now, here are Cubans, once more, at our doorstep — the only novelty being that refuge-seeking Ukrainians are joining them at the border.

Perhaps a new statistic will wake up the uninterest­ed and replace the malaise toward Cuba with some action: More than 46,000 Cubans have reached U.S. borders in the past five months, according to new figures from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

That’s more than the 35,000 rafters who came in the summer of 1994 and were warehoused in Guantanamo tent cities for nine months during the Clinton administra­tion, until they were finally processed and resettled in the United States.

The images of vessels, if you can call the homemade contraptio­ns that, and especially the empty ones, alone ought to touch people’s hearts.

Want to end Cuban mass migration? Support Cubans’ bid for freedom with the passion, commitment and show of outrage as has been rightly shown for Ukraine.

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