Miami Herald

More migrants land in Keys, risking lives to escape ‘terrible situation’

- BY DAVID GOODHUE AND SYRA ORTIZ-BLANES dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com sortizblan­es@miamiheral­d.com Miami Herald photojourn­alist Carl Juste contribute­d to this report. David Goodhue: 305-923-9728, @DavidGoodh­ue

About 40 men, women and some small children entered the next stage in their migration from Cuba to the United States on Wednesday when they were processed by the Border Patrol at the agency’s station in the Middle Florida Keys city of Marathon.

They were among hundreds of people from Cuba, and one large group of over 100 men and women from Haiti, who have landed across the island chain since the end of last week. Many in the group processed Wednesday arrived earlier in the day on a rustic vessel just off Long Key State Park.

As agents processed the migrants, Yaneli Pérez peered through the gaps of the station’s gates, looking for her daughter’s father, Alionay Gallardo. He left the island nation on a boat with roughly a dozen passengers on New Year’s Eve night, because of “the terrible situation that exists in Cuba,” she told the Miami Herald.

He hasn’t been heard from since.

“We don’t know anything about him,” said Pérez, who lives in Marathon.

She hopes Gallardo might be among the Cubans who have spent days on the Dry Tortugas after their boats landed in the isolated federal park about 70 miles west of

Key West.

Pérez is no stranger to the dangers of migrant voyages. Seven years ago, the native of the northern province of Villa Clara left her home on a migrant boat and reached the shores of Long Key.

“That journey … it’s a fear, it’s a terror, you never know where you are going. It’s an uncertaint­y that until you reach the end, you don’t know what’s going to happen,” she said.

Despite the risks, Pérez said “the best chapter of her life” has been in the United States. She is surprised, but happy about the spate of Cuban migrant voyages that have arrived in the Keys in

recent days

“I am glad that all of them can get here, so that not only they but also their families can have a little more,” said Pérez.

The group of mostly men sat on green and purple blankets out on concrete outside one of the station’s doors. A guard asked them for their cellphones, passports and identifica­tions. A woman tried to put an orange shirt on a young child. One man pointed to a boy and said he was 14 years old. Another handed out cups of water under the midday sun.

The smaller child came back from the inside of the station with fresh clothes and waving an

action figure of a basketball player.

The steady influx of migrant arrivals, mainly from Cuba, but with a large group from Haiti, showed no signs of ebbing Wednesday, with multiple landings reported throughout the Florida Keys in the morning.

The Keys and South Florida have seen a significan­t jump in maritime migration during the past two years, but it ramped up markedly since Christmas — with well over 500 people from Cuba coming to shore since Friday and about 130 people from Haiti arriving in a packed sailboat off Key Largo on Tuesday.

On Wednesday, the trend continued, with the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office logs showing at least four landings since midnight. Arrival locations included Lower Matecumbe Key in the Upper Keys and the Middle Keys city of Marathon.

The situation has become so severe that the federal government on Sunday closed the Dry Tortugas National Park because hundreds of Cuban migrants arrived there since last week, overwhelmi­ng the sparse staff of park rangers there.

Also overwhelme­d are U.S. Border Patrol agents assigned to the Keys. Typically, they arrive within an hour to respond to a migrant landing.

Since last week, the response time ballooned to hours to a whole day, according to Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsay, who has become frustrated with the situation because it’s tying up his deputies.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection did not have the exact number of migrants it has encountere­d since Oct. 1, the beginning of the fiscal year. But, the agency said in a statement Tuesday that “encounters” were up 400% compared to the same period last fiscal year.

The Coast Guard is also stopping far more people than it had this time last year — which was already the busiest time for the service in nearly a decade. Since October, Coast Guard crews have intercepte­d more than

4,150 Cubans at sea, according to the latest available numbers. That’s on pace to far exceed the 6,182 interdicte­d in all of fiscal year 2022.

Since Oct. 1, the U.S. Coast Guard says it has repatriate­d 1,036 Haitian migrants, but that number is expected to rise after Tuesday’s landing in Key Largo. Last year, 7,175 Haitians were repatriate­d between Oct. 1, 2021, and Sept. 30, 2022.

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Cuban migrants wait to be processed on Wednesday. About 40 men, women and some small children were processed by the Border Patrol at the agency’s station in the Middle Florida Keys city of Marathon.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Cuban migrants wait to be processed on Wednesday. About 40 men, women and some small children were processed by the Border Patrol at the agency’s station in the Middle Florida Keys city of Marathon.
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Cuban migrants wait to be processed on Wednesday in Marathon. A former migrant says of the journey: ‘It’s a fear, it’s a terror, you never know where you are going.
It’s an uncertaint­y that until you reach the end, you don’t know what’s going to happen.’
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Cuban migrants wait to be processed on Wednesday in Marathon. A former migrant says of the journey: ‘It’s a fear, it’s a terror, you never know where you are going. It’s an uncertaint­y that until you reach the end, you don’t know what’s going to happen.’
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Cuban migrants exit a Border Patrol van as they are gathered to be processed on Wednesday in Marathon.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Cuban migrants exit a Border Patrol van as they are gathered to be processed on Wednesday in Marathon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States