Santa Cruz Sentinel

Cuba says it expects to resume US deportatio­n flights later this month

- By Rebecca Santana and Elliot Spagat

>> Cuba plans to resume accepting deportatio­n flights from the United States this month, a Cuban official said, echoing U.S. concerns about the highest levels of Cuban migration in six decades.

Carlos Fernandez de Cossio, Cuba's deputy foreign minister, said flights are expected before the U.S. ends coronaviru­s pandemic-related restrictio­ns on asylum on May 11, which is widely projected to increase the number of people seeking entry to the U.S. at the U.S.-Mexico border.

The diplomat spoke in an interview with The Associated Press at the Cuban ambassador's residence outside Washington after what he called “a productive meeting” with U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials to discuss migration.

“We have a lot of common understand­ing, both parties, the United States and Cuba, about the nature of the problem,” he said.

Fernandez de Cossio said there was no agreement on the frequency of flights, which will depend on U.S. and Cuban capacity. But he said there was no reason they can't return to pre-pandemic levels of about twice a month. The last flight was in December 2020.

The Department of Homeland Security did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Friday.

Cubans were stopped nearly 43,000 times at the U.S. border with Mexico in December, becoming one of the largest nationalit­ies entering the United States. Numbers plummeted in January after President Joe Biden's administra­tion announced that Cubans could fly to the U.S. if they applied online and had a financial sponsor and that they would be expelled back to Mexico if they crossed the border illegally.

“We're going to see if we can get one in the coming weeks and then to make that regular so that people can be easily removed, not to Mexico but directly to Cuba,” Fernandez de Cossio said late Thursday.

He said that numbers of Cubans fleeing on boats, particular­ly high-powered vessels associated with smugglers, have been rising after a fall earlier this year and that more Cubans were leaving the country to fly to Nicaragua as tourists, typically the first step for Cubans to travel by land to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Fernandez de Cassio said the changes announced in January under which people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela can apply for humanitari­an parole to come to the U.S. have been successful in reducing the numbers of Cubans trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border. But he cautioned that it wasn't a long-term fix.

“It would be irresponsi­ble for us or naive to think that this will be sustainabl­e in the long term because there will always be a limit on the amount of visas,” he said.

It is unclear how many flights the U.S. will need to mount a serious deterrent to Cuban migration.

The two countries have planned five removal flights since November, but each was called off for various operationa­l issues, said Fernandez de Cossio, emphasizin­g that Cuba has supported the flights in theory.

U.S. Border Patrol agents stopped more migrants last year than at any other time on record, largely driven by arrivals of people from Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, countries with strained diplomatic relations. It has been extremely difficult for the U.S. to sponsor deportatio­n flights to those countries, forcing the Biden administra­tion to turn to Mexico for help hosting the migrants.

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