21 July 2012 Last updated at 08:34 GMT
Leaving Cuba: The difficult task of exiting the island
Sarah Rainsford By Sarah Rainsford BBC News, Havana
Cubans need permission to leave their island. And if they stay away too
long, they can't come back.
A year ago, President Raul Castro pledged to "update" the country's
migration laws and allow freedom of movement. So far, the restrictions
remain in place.
But as parliament prepares for the first of two annual sessions on
Monday, Cubans are daring to hope that change might finally be imminent.
The official noticeboard in the grounds of the Vedado district office is
covered in yellow papers, detailing the many rules and regulations.
Would-be travellers need a letter of invitation from the person they
want to visit (fee: $200, £128) and permission to leave their place of
work. For graduate professionals, that means a letter signed by a
minister. They also need $150 for the exit permit, more than seven times
the average monthly salary.
Government critics can be refused permission to travel. Highly-valued
professionals, like doctors, face extra restrictions.
Reform hopes
"As far as I know, Cuba is the only country with these rules. They
shouldn't exist," argues Yenier Prado, who had to wait four months to
get his exit permit.
His family already live in the United States and he had an American visa
to join them. But first Cuba had to agree he could leave.
People queuing at an emigration office in Havana In Havana, Cubans form
long queues outside the emigration offices every morning
"The procedure is too much, and it's very expensive," complains Adanay
Martin, who is hoping to travel for Mexico to study for a masters in
computer science.
"I don't agree with it, they have to get rid of it. But at least they're
talking about that now. It's a step forward," she says, after submitting
her own application for an exit permit.
At the Communist Party Congress last April, Cuba announced hundreds of
once unimaginable social and economic reforms intended to safeguard the
socialist system. Private business opportunities were expanded, people
were allowed to buy houses and cars, and free travel was established as
a principle.
In August, President Raul Castro confirmed that Cuba's migration policy
would be altered - recognition, he said, that some regulations once
justified in defence of the 1959 revolution had "persisted unnecessarily".
Cuba says it closed its borders soon after the revolution as a matter of
national security: the US, just 90 miles away, was the base for fierce
opposition to the Castro regime.
The government was also battling a brain-drain, accusing the US of
poaching its best-trained citizens to undermine the revolution.
Continue reading the main story
"There is still fear and prejudice about migration, still a way to go.
But I think the will for change is there"
Nadal Antelmo Cuban artists
Even today, any Cuban who reaches the US is entitled to residency after
one year.
"The rules were established to control who could come and go, but I
think circumstances are different and Cubans should be allowed to travel
with just a passport," argues Rafael Hernandez, editor of the social
science journal Tema.
The announcement of change was widely anticipated at the last session of
parliament in December. Instead, Raul Castro spoke of a "complex issue"
and said change would come "gradually".
So all eyes are now on the next National Assembly on Monday, where there
is a cautious hope that progress will be made.
"I think the consensus [for change] is pretty large. But there is some
resistance to changing a policy of almost 50 years," says Mr Hernandez.
"There are people in the leadership who think perhaps there will be a
brain drain. But I don't think it will be more than we have now," he
says. "If we make this change at last, those who leave will also be able
to return. They will not be lost to Cuba forever."
Breaking through
Currently, anyone who stays overseas for more than 11 months loses
residency rights. According to the National Statistics Office, 38,165
people were "lost" in that way in 2010 alone.
For many years, those who left the island were seen as traitors, enemies
of the revolution. The rhetoric has changed, with official recognition
that many Cubans leave for economic reasons.
It's now argued that easing the travel restrictions would allow those
who work abroad to maintain their ties with the island, and potentially
return with new expertise and - critically - funds.
The issue is now a matter of public discussion.
one house in a city side street was decked-out as an airport, at art
Biennial The exhibition explores changing attitudes to migration
At this summer's art Biennial there was a silhouette of a plane breaking
through fencing on the sea front and images of the Malecon sea wall,
made of barbed wire.
And one house in a city side street was decked-out as an airport, with
human-like figures poking through windows and hanging from ceilings.
"When we started this project some of my friends told me we'd be
arrested, that we couldn't do it," remembers the artist Nadal Antelmo.
His exhibition explored the changing nature of emigration, and the use
of the word gusano or "worm" for those who left.
"I think it would have been hard to study this theme in the past, and to
put it in the street like this for people to interact with. So I think
there's a change," Nadal says, surrounded by his statues.
"There is still fear and prejudice about migration, still a way to go.
But I think the will for change is there."
But that will still hasn't been converted into concrete policy.
More than a year after Cubans were promised their country would open up,
and allow free travel, they're still waiting.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-18933175
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