Más Información

Tribunal ratifica medidas cautelares contra Andrea Chávez; es acusada de actos anticipados de campaña

“Lo que te quita el gobierno”; Salinas Pliego causa polémica por etiqueta de impuestos en recibos de nómina

Sheinbaum marca límites ante amenazas de Trump sobre acciones contra el narco; "México negocia con EU, pero no se subordina"

“Estoy muy feliz de estar en Costa Rica”, dice Loretta Ortiz tras viajar en primera clase; participará en seminario sobre derechos
Mexico and Central American countries approved a plan on Wednesday for more flights that would allow thousands of Cubans stranded in Costa Rica to continue on to the United States.
Regional governments meeting in Guatemala deemed as a "success" the first pilot trip last week, when 180 Cubans flew to El Salvador, took a bus to Mexico and received transit visas to go to the U.S. border.
"This allows us to pass to the second stage, with two weekly flights following the same route," said Manuel González, Costa Rica's foreign minister.
The authorities, who did not specify how many people would leave on each flight, plan to give priority to pregnant women, children and families among the 7,800 Cubans trapped in Costa Rica since mid-November when Nicaragua closed its borders.
The flights will begin on Feb. 4, and regional governments will meet again in mid-February to evaluate the plan.
Thousands of Cubans have turned to the Central American route to try to reach the United States, spurred by fears that a recent detente between Havana and Washington will end preferential U.S. asylum rights for Cubans that allow them to enter the United States by land without a visa. Those found at sea are deported.
Noticias según tus intereses
[Publicidad]
[Publicidad]










