Monday, April 16, 2012

Cuban government to remove foreign travel restrictions for citizens

Cuban government to remove foreign travel restrictions for citizens
AFP Apr 14, 2012, 01.57AM IST

HAVANA: The Cuban government plans to remove many of the restrictions
that have prevented its citizens from travelling abroad for decades,
National Assembly president Ricardo Alarcon said in an interview
published today.

Alarcon said Cuba is "working towards a profound radical reform of
emigration."

He gave few details in an interview with digital media's Huffington Post
but did say it was a priority issue for the government.

"One of the questions that we are currently discussing at the highest
level of the government is the question of emigration," he said.

Alarcon said "emigration has been one of the themes most manipulated by
the United States. Since 1959, it has been used as a weapon of
destabilisation against Cuba and as a means of distorting Cuban reality."

Cuba has imposed the travel restrictions for a half-century but they
have not prevented thousands of its citizens from emigrating illegally
each year, sometimes in dangerous sea voyages using rickety boats.

Since 1966, the US government has granted Cubans automatic residence if
they can reach the United States.

To travel abroad legally, Cubans need a permit that is valid for 30
days. It can be extended 10 times, after which they must return to Cuba
or lose the right to reside in their own country.

The formalities to get the required visas and permits often are
accompanied by different fees that make travel abroad unaffordable for
many Cubans, whose average monthly salary is less than $20.

Nevertheless, more than 30,000 Cubans immigrate legally each year.

Cuban president Raul Castro announced last summer the government was
planning immigration reforms that would be introduced gradually.

"There is yet another explanation for these restrictions: the need to
protect our human capital," Alarcon said. "The training of doctors,
technicians, teachers, etc is extremely costly for Cuba and the United
States is doing its best to deprive us of these human resources."

Alarcon said the reform also would benefit Cubans who left their country
and need permits to return. They do not have the same "profile" as
Cubans who left their home country in the first years of communist rule,
he said.

http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-04-14/rest-of-world/31341483_1_cuban-government-travel-restrictions-assembly-president-ricardo-alarcon

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