CUBAN MIGRANTS LEAD NEW WAVE OF REFUGEES: Pinder warns numbers now heading our way is ‘through the roof’ – Bahamas Tribune

Part of a group of 13 Cuban migrants who were brought to Grand Bahama earlier this month after being detained by US Coast Guard officials near Cay Sal Bank.

By EARYEL BOWLEG

Tribune Staff Reporter

ebowleg@tribunemedia.net

ATTORNEY General Ryan Pinder said officials are seeing an influx of Cuban migrants into the country in higher numbers than before.

Mr Pinder made the revelation in the senate yesterday in response to Senator Maxine Seymours concern about an $800,000 allocation for rent/living accommodations for the Department of Immigration in the 2022/2023 Budget.

Senator Seymour said: Rent, living accommodations in general, I noticed that weve allocated $800,000. Last year wouldve been $270,000 actually spent and then before that $610,000.

Mr Pinder replied: As we see an increase in illegal migrants coming in, we would want to put immigration officers on-site. We would want to better operationalise officers based in Iguana for plans that we have in the Office of the Attorney General to ensure that the remote court facilities are adequate there to be able to have magistratescome in, but you do need immigration officers there.

He then quotedfrom The Miami Herald on Cuban migrants.

If youve noticed The Miami Herald actually a couple days ago, said the Cuban migrants coming into South Florida this last year is larger than the Mariel boat lift number. I think theyve had some 180,000 thousand Cubans.

Were seeing illegal migrants, he continued, Typically you would see them primarily leave from Haiti, but were seeing a significant amount of Cuban migrants coming in now and we think that we have to redeploy immigration officers throughout the archipelago to better fight this.

Our numbers of illegal migrants, seizures, and repatriations is through the roof, frankly and much higher than weve ever seen before and so this is an effort to try to mitigate that activity and in part of that you have to redeploy immigration officers throughout the archipelago and this is going to be the living expense to be able to house them.

Earlier this month, Prime Minister Philip Brave Davis expressed concern about Cubas absence from the 2022 Summit of the Americas, saying sanctions on the island nation have sparked desperation among residents posing an existential threat to the national security of The Bahamas.

The situation, Mr Davis said at the time, had left the country to grapple with irregular migrants from Cuba.

In May, The Tribune reported that the Royal Bahamas Defence Force had seen a marked increase in illegal migration activity over the last three months, with nearly 1,500 migrants arrestedin Bahamian waters within that time frame.

The statistics at the time showed there had been 1,892 migrants apprehended by local authorities since the beginning ofthe year, with most of those arreststaking place in March.

January and February saw 329 and 253 apprehensions. In March, 741 migrants wereapprehended, while 491 foreign nationals were arrested in April. So far in May, 78 migrants have been arrestedinBahamian waters.

Apprehensions of Haitians were the highest at 1,688 followed by Cubans at 192, Columbians and Ecuadorians at four each, three Hondurians and one African, according to the latest RBDF report. There were also 30 interdictions.

The Budget was passed in the Senate.

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CUBAN MIGRANTS LEAD NEW WAVE OF REFUGEES: Pinder warns numbers now heading our way is 'through the roof' - Bahamas Tribune

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