The Washington Post
Friday , September 1, 2000 ; A28

Cuba Moves to Resume Talks on Migration Policies

By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Foreign Service
 

The Cuban government has agreed to resume migration talks with the United States, ending a three-month impasse that
threatened accords designed to prevent a mass exodus from the island.

No date for talks has been scheduled. But a 15-page Cuban diplomatic note, delivered Wednesday to the State Department,
paves the way for new meetings over exit permits, migrant smuggling and other issues that have prompted bitter rhetoric
between the two countries.

"The talks are important because they involve bilateral commitments that have been made," said a senior State Depatment
official. "They've been spending a lot of energy attacking our policy, and we called them on it."

The United States and Cuba, which have not had diplomatic relations in four decades, signed agreements in 1994 and 1995 to
control the flow of migrants across the Straits of Florida.

The accords granted 20,000 U.S. visas each year to Cubans and, for the first time, allowed the U.S. Coast Guard to send
back illegal migrants intercepted at sea. It represented the most significant change to U.S.-Cuban immigration policy since the
1966 Cuban Adjustment Act, which gives Cubans almost automatic residency status on arriving in the United States.

Cuban officials have branded the 1966 act "murderous," saying it entices Cubans to risk their lives to cross the Straits. The
campaign gained momentum after the return to Cuba of Elian Gonzalez, the 6-year-old shipwreck survivor whose mother died
during an illegal attempted crossing to Miami last November.

Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright fired back this week by accusing Cuba of denying exit permits to people holding U.S.
visas. Albright called on Cuba to resume semiannual talks on migration. The last meetings, scheduled for June, were postponed
during the furor around the Gonzalez case.