Albright: Cuba Denying Exit Permits
Associated Press
Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright yesterday accused Cuba of denying
exit permits to Cubans with U.S. visas, thereby
separating families and forcing would-be immigrants to risk escapes
by boat.
Albright said the United States lodged a formal protest with Cuba's
diplomatic office in Washington. "The government of Cuba
is increasingly obstructing the safe, legal and orderly migration of
individuals from Cuba," she said.
The diplomatic note said 117 Cubans from 57 families had been denied
exit permits by the Cuban government in a recent
75-day period. The United States had granted all of them visas.
Disclosure of the note follows the protracted dispute with Cuban Americans
over 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez. The boy was
spirited from Cuba by his mother, who died at sea, and was taken home
by his father after a lengthy legal battle.
Unlike Elian and his mother, the 117 Cubans cited in the U.S. complaint
had visas to enter the United States. The diplomatic
note alleged that Cuba had not abided by a 1994 agreement for the orderly
migration of 20,000 Cubans plus family members
to the United States.
The Cuban diplomatic mission offered no immediate reaction to the accusation.
However, spokesman Roberto Garcia criticized
U.S. policy as criminal, immoral and discriminatory, saying the United
States was responsible for deaths at sea because it
encouraged Cubans to try to reach U.S. shores.