White House urges Cubans and exiles to stay put
Posted on: Wednesday, 2 August 2006, 15:14 CDT
By Matt Spetalnick
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House on Wednesday urged Cubans on the communist-ruled island and exiles living in south Florida not to begin a mass migration spurred by uncertainty over Cuban leader Fidel Castro's health problems.
A bipartisan group of U.S. senators also sought swift action on a bill to release up to $80 million to promote democracy and human rights in Cuba, regardless of whether Castro recovers from the intestinal surgery he underwent this week.
Washington, which maintains a tight embargo on Cuba, has long anticipated that Castro's death could prompt a chaotic flood from Miami of Cuban exiles crossing the narrow Straits of Florida to visit or pick up relatives in their homeland and of Cubans trying to reach the U.S. mainland.
There have been no signs of such movement in recent days.
White House spokesman Tony Snow said it was difficult to assess the situation since Castro fell ill and temporarily transferred power to his brother Raul earlier this week because Cuba was a "closed society.."
"It's also, however, important at this juncture to tell people stay where you are. This is not a time for people to try to be getting in the water and going either way," Snow said.
"We've talked about the importance of eventually finding an orderly and safe way for people to try to make transit between the two places," he added.
The departure of Castro from power has long been a goal of U.S. policy, but the administration has been cautious since word of the 79-year-old leader's illness surfaced on Monday.
Snow said President George W. Bush wanted a "free and democratic Cuba in the post-Castro era."
Castro handed over power to his 75-year-old defense minister brother after surgery to halt stomach bleeding.
As speculation swirled that his rule might be nearing an end, the state-run newspaper Granma published a message from Castro on Wednesday saying details of his health were secret but that he was stable and in good spirits.
The legislation being pushed in the U.S. Senate would aid dissidents, workers' rights organizations, libraries, journalists, doctors and economists and help promote human rights reforms, the sponsors said.
Money could go directly to such groups as well as through international bodies such as the Organization of American States, senators and aides said.
Florida Republican Sen. Mel Martinez, who is Cuban-born, said this bill would be a first step, and Congress could take further action after its summer break.
Cuban officials have condemned U.S. planning for post-Castro Cuba as a violation of international law.
(Additional reporting by Joanne Kenen and Vicki Allen)
Source: REUTERS
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