No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeImmigrationCuban migrants' trip to US will be monitored by human rights ombudsmen

Cuban migrants’ trip to US will be monitored by human rights ombudsmen

Cuban migrants in Costa Rica are nearly set to make a notoriously dangerous trek north to the United States, but officials from the region’s human rights agencies say they are coordinating to provide a safe chain of travel for the estimated 8,000 Cubans with temporary visas here.

The Central American Council of Human Rights Ombudsmen released a statement Tuesday saying it will oversee the migrants’ trip to the U.S.-Mexico border, after a Dec. 28 agreement mapped out a path for eligible Cubans to get there — with assistance from the region’s governments.

National institutions that oversee human rights, including Costa Rica’s Ombudsman’s Office, will keep tabs on the treatment given to the Cubans by each country along the planned route, according to the council’s statement.

Migrants are expected to have a police escort on their way north and will be given temporary visas at their first stop in El Salvador.

Thousands of Cubans have been stuck in Costa Rica since Nicaragua refused them entrance on Nov. 15. The Costa Rican government granted nearly 8,000 temporary visas to the migrants, who have been put up at dozens of makeshift refugee camps in the country, mainly near the border with Nicaragua.

Recommended: Cuban migrants spend a month in camps as regional leaders fail to reach solution

Thanks to last week’s regional accord, any Cuban that was issued a temporary visa will be allowed to fly from Costa Rica to El Salvador in the coming weeks, although no concrete timetable has been set for the first planned flight. From El Salvador, migrants are to be bussed through Guatemala and Mexico to the border with Texas, according to Costa Rica’s Foreign Exchange Minister Manuel González.

González announced Monday that migrants traveling with children will leave first, and that around 180 Cubans could be aboard the initial flight.

“The aim is that sometime next week, or before if possible, the first departure of a group can take place,” he told reporters Monday.

Once on U.S. soil, Cubans can claim refugee status and gain permanent residency.

The latest Cuban migrant crisis began in early November after Costa Rican authorities broke up a smuggling ring in the country. The underground network was charging Cuban migrants up to $15,000 per person to bring them through Central America and to the United States.

After granting temporary transit visas to Cubans for a month, the Costa Rican government decided to stop issuing the visas on Dec. 18, 2015. Officials announced at the time that they would begin deporting any undocumented Cubans entering the country.

The United Nations International Organization for Migration is overseeing the operation to transport the some 8,000 visa-holding Cuban migrants from Costa Rica to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Tuesday’s statement from the ombudsmen’s group read, “The council celebrates this agreement but it’s necessary to continue efforts to find a solution for the hundreds of Cuban migrants that are also in Panama.

“We want to reiterate that the issue of migration requires a regional approach. Central American countries have to make every effort necessary to safeguard the human rights of any person from any nation.”

Trending Now

Costa Rica Mega-Prison Project Falls Behind Original July Deadline

Costa Rica’s new high-security prison for organized crime suspects and convicted inmates will not be fully ready by the end of July, despite earlier...

João Fonseca Leads Latin American Hopes on Wimbledon Day 1

Latin American tennis gets a crowded opening day at Wimbledon today, led by João Fonseca, Francisco Cerúndolo and Beatriz Haddad Maia as the region...

Long Lines Hit Costa Rica Airport After Midday Flight Surge

Long lines formed Saturday at the departure immigration area of Juan Santamaría International Airport after a heavy midday wave of flights pushed thousands of...

Costa Rica Warns Wildlife Trafficking Is Becoming Organized Crime

Costa Rica’s environmental prosecutors are warning that wildlife trafficking is no longer just a scattered problem of people capturing animals for pets or private...

Landslides Keep Costa Rica’s Route 32 Closed

Route 32, the main highway linking the Central Valley with the Caribbean province of Limón, remains closed in several sections after landslides triggered by...

A Look Back: Remembering the Costa Rica Fourth of July Picnic in 1965

Fifty-seven years ago in July was simply unforgettable. Sure, I was all of 6 years old, and had only just begun to have my...

Costa Rica Adds Crocodile Warning Signs at Beaches and Rivers

Costa Rica has begun installing 55 warning signs at beaches, rivers, national parks and conservation areas where crocodiles and caimans are known to live,...

João Fonseca Falls at Wimbledon as Brazil’s Run Ends

João Fonseca’s Wimbledon run ended Friday with a flat but revealing third-round defeat, as Russian qualifier Roman Safiullin beat the Brazilian teenager 6-3, 6-3,...

Fonseca and Arévalo Keep Latin America Alive at Wimbledon

Latin America’s Wimbledon picture has narrowed quickly, leaving Brazil’s João Fonseca as the region’s clearest singles contender and El Salvador’s Marcelo Arévalo as Central...
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel