The Miami Herald
January 8, 2001

 Boat carrying Cubans seeking asylum arrives in Costa Rica

 By MARIANELA JIMENEZ
 Associated Press Writer

 SAN JOSE, Costa Rica -- (AP) -- A boat packed with 22 Cubans seeking political
 asylum has arrived in this Central American nation.

 Officials said the group -- between the ages of 14 and 60 -- arrived late Saturday
 on a stretch of Caribbean coast near Limon, 80 miles east of San Jose, the
 capital. Police discovered the refugees on Sunday.

 The 17 men and five women were scheduled to be interviewed formally by
 immigration officials on Monday. Carlos Alvarado, a Costa Rican foreign relations
 adviser, talked briefly with the group on Sunday and said it was made up of a
 family and several friends.

 Cuba sent a note to Costa Rica claiming the fishing boat belonged to the
 government and had been stolen, Costa Rican Security Minister Rogelio Ramos
 said. The boat has a capacity of 15 people.

 It left Cuba on Dec. 29, stopping at the island of San Andres to refuel and then
 traveling on to Costa Rica.

 On Sunday, all of the Cubans were given food and medical treatment.

 The last time Costa Rica received a boat carrying Cuban refugees was in 1996. In
 that case, the government agreed to give the refugees visas.

 Cuba's communist government says the vast majority of Cubans who leave the
 country illegally by boat are economic migrants rather than political refugees, no
 different from the thousands of Mexicans and Central Americans who cross the
 U.S. border illegally in search of work.