By JUAN O. TAMAYO
The Cuban government's decision to lift its deeply hated requirement of
exit permits for citizens to travel abroad, while retaining other tough
controls, will give perhaps millions of average Cubans a better shot at living
abroad.
It may also
generate an increase in the cash remittances going to the island, from the
increased number of Cubans abroad, and ease some of the pressures growing under
ruler Raul Castro's decision to lay off 1 million state employees and cut
subsidies on food and the health and education sectors.
But the decree
published Tuesday also indicated that Cubans who have had problems obtaining
exit and entry permits in the past are likely continue to do so: physicians,
military and government, dissidents at home and outspoken critics abroad.
"The devil
is in the details of the new migration law," wrote Havana blogger Yoani
Sanchez in a Twitter message. She also called it "gatopardista," a
reference to a situation where change is more apparent than real.
News of the
decree set off smiles across the island among Cubans who have been complaining
for decades about the exit permit, known as "the white card,"
required even if the travelers had valid visas to enter other countries.
"Now the
question is where, where can go to," said Katarina Ponce, a recently
laid-off government secretary. "Of course a whole multitude want to leave
this place. But what countries will let us in. We must find out if we need
visas for Russia, Cambodia, the end of the world."
A Castro decree
published in Tuesday's edition of the Gazeta Oficial said the following changes
will take effect on Jan. 14:
- Abolishes the need for the exit permit, which cost $150.
- Abolishes the $200 "letter of invitation" that foreigners had to send Cubans so they could apply for passports and visas.
- Extends the permission to leave Cuba from 11 to 24 months, with some renovations possible. After that, Cubans are considered to have "left definitively."
- Abolishes the entry permit for Cubans living abroad, and extend their allowed stay in Cuba per trip from one month to three months, which can be extended.
But the decree
and an editorial in the official newspaper Granma on Tuesday made it clear Cuba
will maintain strict controls on citizens traveling abroad and exiles returning
to the island as long as U.S. immigration policies favor Cubans so much.
"So long as
there exist policies that favor the 'theft of brain' designed to take away from
us the human resources that are indispensable to the economic, social and
scientific development of the country, Cuba will be obliged to maintain
measures to defend itself," Granma said.
The decree,
however showed the regulations go far behind what other countries call
"brain drain."
Supervisors must
still approve the issuance of passports to top government officials, university
professionals, physicians and other medical personnel, top sports figures and
others who carry out "vital" functions.
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