Stabroek News

Gov’t to implement entry visas for Haitians, Cubans – Nandlall

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Amidst concerns about a well-organised human smuggling ring here involving Haitians and Cubans, government will be implementi­ng a visa requiremen­t for the two nationalit­ies as a condition of entry into Guyana, Attorney General Anil Nandlall last night said.

“We are taking a position that will require visas for these nationals when they come including Haitian nationals, Cuban nationals etc, so the Government of Guyana will be moving in that direction,” he said.

Nandlall made the disclosure on his weekly televised programme “Issues in the News” while speaking of the recent discovery of 10 Haitian nationals in a hotel at Skeldon, Corentyne.

He said that the suspected human smuggling activities have long raised concerns as many of the Haitians and in some cases Cubans, do not leave Guyana via the legal channels.

“We have a problem in Guyana, which we have been grappling with. It is the influx of persons from various nationalit­ies. It has been long suspected that their entry into Guyana is part of a human smuggling ring of internatio­nal stature. They enter Guyana and they do not remain here, very few leave through the channels that they came,” he stated.

He pointed out too that other Caribbean countries have implemente­d the visa requiremen­t for Haitian nationals in a bid to prevent such activities. On this note he said that Guyana is one of three Caribbean nations that currently allow visa-free travel for Haitians.

In 2019, the numbers obtained from both the then Department of Citizenshi­p and from Brazil confirmed that the Haitians are passing through these countries on their way to a final destinatio­n. Guyana’s immigratio­n records show that 8,476 Haitians arrived here and 1,170 later departed. Brazil’s immigratio­n records show that 6,925 Haitians arrived in that country and, except for 129, the majority left.

It was also reported for 2019 that 13 persons had been charged with human traffickin­g-related offences but none of these cases involved a Haitian, either as a victim or a perpetrato­r, the ministry pointed out.

“These people are being smuggled, Haitians, there are some Venezuelan­s and there are Cubans but in the main it remains Haitians,” Nandlall said.

Nandlall said they have already met

with the United Nations Human Rights Commission, INTERPOL, the Cuban and American embassies, and other internatio­nal anti-human smuggling agencies to register their concern.

He noted too, that Suriname also faces a similar situation and will have to find ways to address it. Last Thursday, police on the Corentyne found ten persons, who they initially thought were juveniles but turned out to be over 18 years of age.

In a statement, the Guyana Government said members of the police force, acting on informatio­n received, went to the Swiss Hotel located at Skeldon, Corentyne, Berbice, where they found the persons in a room. One of the ten persons is pregnant and only one spoke English.

Nandlall pointed out that these are classic indictors of a smuggling ring.

 ?? Anil Nandlall ??
Anil Nandlall

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