Americas > Caribbean > Cuba > Over 700 Cuban doctors working in Venezuela have fled across to Colombia

Cuba: Over 700 Cuban doctors working in Venezuela have fled across to Colombia

2015/08/26

For geographical reasons, neighboring Colombia is a favored gateway for Cubans fleeing Venezuela, who’s a populist government, is struggling to rein-in runaway inflation, widespread shortages of goods and services and rising social unrest.

On Saturday, the exodus reached critical mass at the same time as about 100 Cuban doctors, who deserted a medical mission in Venezuela and have been stranded in Colombia for months awaiting entry into the US, staged a turmoil to draw attention to their plight. Deteriorating conditions in Venezuela are causing increasing numbers of Cuban medical personnel working there to immigrate to the United States under a special US program launched in 2006 that expedites their applications.

Brandishing their diplomas, the Cuban health professionals congregated in a plaza in Kennedy, a working-class neighborhood built in the 1960s with funds from John F. Kennedy’s Alliance for Evolution.

Brandishing their diplomas, the Cuban health professionals congregated in a plaza in Kennedy, a working-class neighborhood built in the 1960s

Several described how punishing working conditions and widespread shortages of food and basic necessities, compounded by meager pay and mistreatment in Venezuela is leading a lot of to sneak across the border seeking a new start in the United States.

While they say conditions in Colombia are better than Venezuela, the cost of living is higher, and a lot of say they have had to borrow money from strangers and have been surviving on a single meal a day.

Apparently health care professionals say they fear the delays in processing their visa requests under the 2006 program could be a sign that President Barack Obama is seeking to end the incentive as part of his campaign to normalize relations with the communist island.

The 2006 US program was designed to lure Cuba’s medical talent and deprive President Raul Castro’s family government of an significant source of foreign revenue.

Cuba has not made public how much it pays doctors on foreign missions, though it is believed to be a small fraction of what it collects from the nations where they serve.

Cuba, which prides itself on a comprehensive healthcare system and has long exported doctors and nurses to friendly states, currently has additional than 50,000 healthcare professionals in some 66 nations as part of the international outreach program dating back to the 1960s.

The majority, thought to number about 10,000 persons, work in Venezuela, which sends Cuba some 92,000 barrels of oil a day worth about US$3.2 billion a year in exchange.

In Colombia, authorities said that 117 Cuban doctors are currently in the country processing visa requests with the United States. A total of 720 have arrived this year so far, although 603 have been deported because they exceeded the 90-day safe-conduct granted by Colombia in order to solicit a US visa.

National Department spokesman John Kirby said last week that while Cubans regularly voice their concerns about the program, it’s not part of bilateral talks taking place between the two governments and there are no plans to eliminate it.

“It is not at all related to our new policy with respect to Cuba,” he said. “There’s no tie, no connection”.

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