JavaScript Free Code
Showing posts with label U.S.-Latin American relations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S.-Latin American relations. Show all posts
Via the Pew Research Center:

Venezuela is now among the top nations of origin for asylum applicants to the U.S., accounting for 10,221 applications filed between October 2015 and June 2016 � up from 3,810 filed during the same time period the year before.

My first reaction was to question how likely it was that asylum would be granted. I've testified in asylum cases and "well-founded fear of persecution" is a high bar. It's not just about country conditions, no matter how awful they might be. But because the U.S. immigration courts are so horribly clogged, we just don't know--the article notes that some Venezuela cases have been sitting since 2011.

Regardless, right now more Venezuelans are seeking asylum than any other country except China and Mexico. The signs of political and economic collapse are just everywhere.

Venezuelans Seek Asylum in the US

Granma has an article on Cuban migrants that ends with a call for revoking the Cuban Adjustment Act:

La pol�tica de Pies secos-Pies mojados vigente desde 1995 establece que aquellos que to�quen suelo estadounidense tienen derecho a quedarse, a diferencia de quienes son interceptados. Destacan adem�s que si llegan a Estados Unidos por un tercer pa�s v�a terrestre �como pretenden hacer los que se encuentran en estos momentos en Turbo�, basta con que vayan al puesto fronterizo y demuestren que provienen de la Isla para acogerse a ese mecanismo. 
Otra de las formas con la que EE.UU. promueve la migraci�n ilegal es el programa de Parole para Profe�sionales M�dicos Cubanos, creado durante la administraci�n de George W. Bush. En este caso se estimula que los galenos abandonen las mi�siones m�dicas en los pa�ses donde laboran. 
Ambas iniciativas, que pueden ser cambiadas por el presidente de Estados Unidos, tienen su trasfondo en la Ley de Ajuste cubano de 1966 que concede una v�a expedita para la residencia a los ciudadanos cubanos que la pidan. Nacida en los tiempos de la Guerra Fr�a, su objetivo sigue siendo desestabilizar el pa�s.

This is all accurate, though of course it neatly sidesteps the question of why so many Cubans are trying to leave.

More importantly, it is a reminder that the days of the Cuban Adjustment Act's days are numbered. The negotiations are assuredly going on now. It has to be entirely secret, however, or there will be a flood of people trying to leave Cuba before it happens. It's even harder in the current U.S. political climate because Congress needs to be involved.

Cuban Argument Against Cuban Adjustment Act