U.S. to process some visas in Cuba after 4-year hiatus
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[March 04, 2022]
By Dave Sherwood
HAVANA (Reuters) - The U.S. Embassy in
Havana announced on Thursday it would increase staffing and resume some
visa processing in Cuba several years after the Trump administration
slashed personnel at the facility following a spate of unexplained
health incidents.
The top U.S. diplomat in Havana, Timothy Zuniga-Brown, made the
announcement at a news conference, confirming a Reuters report from
Monday.
Following the drawdown of staff in Havana in 2017, the Trump
administration required Cubans to apply for visas in the U.S. embassy in
Guyana, a costly trip that few on the island could afford.
Zuniga-Brown's announcement stressed a "limited resumption of some
immigrant visa services" in Havana. It added that Cuban immigrant visas
will still be processed primarily in Guyana, while Havana offices will
focus on other consular services and "limited emergency non-immigrant
visa processing."
The eventual deployment of additional consular officers to Havana, a
result of President Joe Biden's ongoing review of Cuba policy, will
begin to address a more than four-year backlog of requests for
immigration visas by Cubans with family in the United States.
It also marks a rare step by the Biden administration to ease
restrictions on communist-led Cuba imposed by former Republican
President Donald Trump, who rolled back the historic rapprochement
overseen by his Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama.
Just prior to the announcement, the Cuban government issued a statement
to Reuters slamming the Trump-era policy as unjustified and harmful to
U.S-Cuba ties.
"Over five years, that decision has had very damaging consequences for
the entire Cuban population, as well as for Americans," said the
statement signed by Ines Fors, head of U.S.-Cuba bilateral relations for
Cuba's Foreign Ministry.
The Cuban statement did not directly address the staffing announcement,
and Zuniga-Brown did not provide a timeline or numbers for the increase
in personnel.
Havana resident Maria de Lourdes Galban, a 35-year old doctor hoping to
reunite her two young children with their father in the United States,
said she had hoped for more.
"I expected a broader opening and it hurts me because I know that there
are thousands of Cubans who are in the same situation and we have been
waiting for many years," she said.
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A security guard stands outside the U.S. Embassy in Havana, Cuba,
December 12, 2017. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini/File Photo
Trump scaled back embassy staff and
cut down on visa processing in 2017 after some embassy personnel in
Havana became ill with what has become known as "Havana syndrome."
The unexplained illnesses first affected U.S. employees in the Cuban
capital but later cropped up in other parts of the world.
The Cuban government has long denied any involvement or knowledge of
the incidents.
POLITICAL FALLOUT
In addition to slashing visa processing, Trump restricted
remittances to Cuba, scaled back flights to the island and increased
hurtles for U.S. citizens seeking to travel to Cuba for anything
other than family visits.
The U.S. Embassy on Thursday did not address those issues.
Biden, who served as Obama's vice president, had promised during the
2020 election campaign against Trump to re-engage with Cuba's
government, and many in both countries expected he would roll back
Trump-era restrictions.
The Biden administration instead slapped fresh sanctions on Cuban
officials in response to Havana's crackdown on protesters following
widespread marches on the island in July.
Biden officials are mindful that any easing of restrictions on Cuba
could lead to political fallout from conservative Cuban Americans, a
key voting bloc in south Florida.
But the resumption of visa processing at the embassy is less likely
to spur a serious political backlash since a number of
Cuban-American lawmakers, both Democrats and Republicans, have
backed the idea.
Olga Lidia Pérez, a 67-year old retired doctor in Havana who has
waited four years to reunite with her daughters in Florida, said she
was left with more questions than answers following the embassy's
announcement this week.
"I still don't know whether to believe it or not because between
Cuba and the United States you never know," she said. "There is
always uncertainty."
(Reporting by Dave Sherwood, additional reporting by Nelson Acosta
in Havana and Matt Spetalnick and Patricia Zengerle in Washington;
Editing by David Alire Garcia, Leslie Adler and Bill Berkrot)
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