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News > Latin America

Mexico Deports 91 Cubans Following 'Wet Foot Dry Foot' Policy

  • Cubans gather at the migration office while waiting for their safe passage to cross Mexico after Washington repealed a measure granting automatic residency to virtually every Cuban who arrived in the United States, in Tapachula, Mexico.

    Cubans gather at the migration office while waiting for their safe passage to cross Mexico after Washington repealed a measure granting automatic residency to virtually every Cuban who arrived in the United States, in Tapachula, Mexico. | Photo: Reuters

Published 20 January 2017
Opinion

The policy let Cubans who fled to the United States pursue residency if they reached the mainland, but not if they were picked up at sea before reaching the shore.

Mexico's government has deported 91 Cubans about a week after the United States ended the so-called "wet foot, dry foot" policy that granted residency to almost every Cuban who reached U.S. soil, Mexican officials said on Friday.

ANALYSIS:
Why the US Immigration Policy Toward Cuba Had to Go

The repeal of the longstanding policy last Thursday by former U.S. President Barack Obama left hundreds of Cubans stranded in Mexico and Central American countries.

The 71 men and 20 women were flown to the Caribbean island by Mexican federal police jet from the southern city of Tapachula, Mexico's National Migration Institute said.

The Cubans were in Mexico "irregularly," the institute said in a statement, though they had applied for a permit to remain temporarily in the country.

Cuban officials had long sought an end to the policy, arguing that the promise of U.S. residency was fuelling people-trafficking and encouraging dangerous journeys.

The policy let Cubans who fled to the United States pursue residency if they reached the mainland, but not if they were picked up at sea before reaching the shore.

Obama entered into detente in 2014 with Cuban President Raul Castro, and the two governments continued to sign cooperation agreements this week to wrap up a range of issues before Donald Trump was sworn in as U.S. president on Friday.

Trump has vowed to scrap Obama's policy toward Havana unless Raul's government makes further concessions, although he has not specified what those should be.

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