CNN
January 2, 2000
 
 
INS, State Department officials meet with father of Cuban boy

                  HAVANA (CNN) -- An Immigration and Naturalization Service spokesman
                  said Saturday representatives of the agency and the U.S. State Department
                  have met in Cuba with Juan Miguel Gonzalez, the father of 6-year-old Elian
                  Gonzalez.

                  The meeting, at the home of an international diplomat on Friday, was part of
                  "the fact finding process to reach a final decision in Elian's case and move
                  forward as quickly and cautiously as possible," the INS said.

                  Sources said the meeting also was held to address claims that the boy's
                  father is being pressured by the Cuban government to demand his son's
                  return.

                  Attorney Spencer Eig who filed Elian's political asylum claim angrily
                  dismissed a second meeting. He called it "totally useless and pointless."

                  "If the point is to determine if he's (the father) under duress, how can they
                  determine it if he's over there," Eig told CNN.

                  "He's like a man with a gun to his head over there," Eig added.

                  Tug of war

                  Elian was found floating off the Florida coast in an inner tube on
                  Thanksgiving day, days after a boat carrying 13 Cubans to the United States
                  capsized. Elian's mother and stepfather died in the accident, along with eight
                  others.

                  Elian has since been at the center of a tug of war between his father who
                  wants his son back in Cuba and his father's relatives who want the boy to
                  remain with them in the United States.

                  Gonzalez, who was divorced from the boy's mother but shared custody of
                  the youngster, claims he had no prior knowledge of the mother's intentions to
                  leave for the United States. Gonzalez calls his son regularly.

                  While U.S. immigration authorities try to determine the boy's legal status, the
                  youngster has been showered with gifts, given a free trip to Disney World
                  and Universal Studios amusement parks, and visited by anti-Castro activists,
                  including two members of Congress.

                  Helms wants Congress to grant citizenship

                  U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina and other Republican leaders say
                  they will ask Congress to grant the boy U.S. citizenship.

                  Attorneys hired by the boy's great uncle have filed a political asylum claim
                  for the youngster.

                  The question is whether the uncle has legal standing to speak on Elian's
                  behalf.

                  The boy has become a cause-celebre simultaneously for Cuban President
                  Fidel Castro and anti-Castro exiles in Miami.

                  Since December 5, demonstrations have been staged nearly daily in Cuba
                  demanding the boy's return -- the cry "Free Elian " is chanted and his image
                  adorns billboards and T-shirts.

                  In Miami, the boy has appeared on camera nearly daily playing with toys.

                  The boy's relatives insist Elian should stay because that was his mother's
                  wish. They also argue they can provide him a better life in the U.S.

                  Many immigration law specialists argue the father's rights supersede those of
                  the boy's extended family in the U.S.

                  Attorneys representing the boy's interests argue his father is not able to
                  speak freely and cannot possibly want his son to return to the communist
                  island.

                  A twice-postponed meeting between INS and the boy is scheduled for
                  January 21, however, immigration officials have said the agency might decide
                  on the boy's immigration status before then.

                  Last week, the six year old spent his first Christmas in the United States. On
                  New Year's Eve, he played outside the Little Havana home in Miami where
                  he's been living.

                  Elian cuddled a black Labrador retriever puppy given to him Wednesday by
                  U.S. Representative Lincoln Diaz-Balart of Florida.

                  "We thought of something that Elian can really cherish and identify with," said
                  Diaz-Balart.