The Guardian (USA)

US and Cuban officials to hold talks amid tensions over migration

- Reuters

American and Cuban officials are due to meet in Washington on Thursday to discuss migration concerns, people familiar with the matter said, in the highest-level formal US talks with Havana since Joe Biden took office last year.

The meeting comes at a time when Biden’s administra­tion is grappling with rising numbers of undocument­ed migrants attempting to cross the US border from Mexico, with Cubans making up a growing portion of them.

Tensions between Washington and Havana over the Cuban government’s crackdown on protests, continuing American sanctions on the communistr­uled island and other issues have made it difficult for the countries to cooperate on challenges such as irregular migration.

Leading the Cuban delegation will be the deputy foreign minister, Carlos Fernandez de Cossio, two sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The delegation is expected to meet with senior officials of the US state department and other agencies.

The US wants Cuba to take back more deportees from among the record numbers of Cubans arriving at the USMexico border, according to a US official and another source, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Cuba has said it supports legal, orderly and safe migration. It blames the US for the uptick in irregular migration, saying cold war-era sanctions and a decision to close the American consular section in Havana encourage Cubans to seek riskier routes to leave the island.

The state department last month said it would again begin processing some visas for Cubans in Havana to start reducing the backlog after a fouryear hiatus, but progress has been slow.

“We have seen a significan­t increase in irregular Cuban migrants to the United States, both via land and maritime routes,” a state department spokespers­on said. “Cubans currently rank the second-largest group arriving to the United States’ south-west border.”

The spokespers­on, who asked not to be named, declined to confirm the planned meeting but said “we regularly engage with Cuban officials on issues of importance to the US government, such as human rights and migration”.

Thursday’s planned talks appear to be at a higher level than known formal contacts since Biden took office in January 2021.

The Cuban government did not immediatel­y respond to questions seeking comment.

The talks are scheduled to be held just a day after the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, and regional counterpar­ts are due to wrap up a conference on migration in Panama. Cuba is not due to attend that conference.

A record number of migrants attempted to cross the US-Mexican border during Biden’s first year in office. American officials are preparing for even higher numbers this year.

Amid Cuba’s faltering economy, after Nicaragua lifted visa requiremen­ts for Cubans in November, many dropped everything, sold their homes and took a flight for Managua, with hopes of heading north through Central America to the US.

Nicaragua, a close regional ally of Cuba, said the move was intended to promote commercial exchange, tourism and humanitari­an family relations.

Initial fervor has been followed by frustratio­n as the US has undertaken a regional effort to curb border crossings.

The number of Cubans apprehende­d at the US-Mexico border reached 16,531 in February, the highest single-month total on record, according to US Customs and Border Protection data.

Even as Washington and Havana prepare to re-engage on migration, Biden administra­tion officials are mindful that any easing of restrictio­ns on Cuba could lead to political fallout from conservati­ve Cuban Americans, a key voting bloc in south Florida.

Donald Trump rolled back a historic rapprochem­ent that his predecesso­r Barack Obama oversaw between the US and its old cold war foe.

 ?? ?? The United States wants Cuba to take back more deportees arriving at the US-Mexico border, a US official said. Photograph: José Luis González/Reuters
The United States wants Cuba to take back more deportees arriving at the US-Mexico border, a US official said. Photograph: José Luis González/Reuters

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