Cuban migrants swim, wade last yards to U.S.
Reuters
KEY LARGO -- Three Cuban migrants leaped from a raft and swam and trod
water for several hours before reaching the Florida Keys
Tuesday, avoiding being picked up by the U.S. Coast Guard.
Live television showed the three reaching a shoreline of mangrove trees
by a luxury residential complex near Key Largo, south of Miami,
treading gingerly over rocks and raising their hands in triumph.
A fourth man on the raft had earlier been taken aboard one of several
Coast Guard vessels that were on the scene to try to intercept the men
and stop them from reaching the shore.
Under U.S. policy on illegal migrants from communist Cuba, migrants
who make it to shore are generally allowed to stay in the country, but
those who are intercepted at sea are usually sent home. The three Cubans
were likely to be taken into custody but later released into the
community.
The so-called wet-foot/dry-foot policy periodically leads to drama off
the Florida coast as migrants try to evade the Coast Guard and make it
to shore.
On Tuesday, although the Coast Guard could have moved more forcefully
to stop the men, a spokesman said safety had been the first
consideration. ``Any time we have a person in water we use minimal
amount of force and that's for their safety and ours,'' said Petty Officer
Ryan Doss.
The migrants were spotted by a Coast Guard patrol plane and a vessel
was sent out to intercept them, Doss said. But when it got near the
raft, the occupants threatened the Coast Guard crew with oars, he said.
The Guardsmen responded with pepper spray, at which point the
migrants dropped their oars and leaped into the ocean, Doss said.