Essay On Cuban Immigration

Words: 453
Pages: 2

Tue May 31, El Paso, Texas a chartered jet was one of dozens that shuttled stranded Cuban migrants from Panama to Mexico this month in what officials described as a humanitarian airlift.
Its goal to help Cubans reach the U.S. after several Central American countries closed their borders to the surge of people going north. Being America’s new immigrants searching for places to put down roots, refugee agencies. Politicians are arguing over whether this group of immigrants should be here in the first place. Because they're Cuban, these immigrants are in the U.S. legally the second they arrive, regardless of how they get here unlike the Central Americans who've flooded across the border in recent years, they have little reason to fear deportation. Photos of models strutting in a
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So they, like many Cubans, left for the promise of a better life in Ecuador, where they wouldn't need a visa to enter the country. But the family's efforts to make a living there didn't work out. Her husband following up by saying “they didn’t even pay us…. It was worse than Cuba.” Many experts say many factors are fueling a spike in the number of Cubans to arrive even through a dangerous journey to reach the U.S. Many fear that U.S. policies that put Cubans on a fast track to legal residency could be repealed as relations between the two countries improve. But times have changed. While the U.S. Coast Guard says it has seen a spike in the number of Cubans trying to reach the United States on boats, far more are coming to the country on land. Karl Heimer the pastor left his home in Guantánamo, Cuba, in the 1950s to study in the United States; after Fidel Castro came to power, Heimer applied for refugee status. Now his main goal is to help the dozens of Cubans arriving with no shelter and provide for them. More than 35,600 Cubans have arrived at U.S. ports of entry since October 1, nearly three-quarters of them at the Texas border,