|
U.S.
medical students leave Cuba for fear of Bush
measures
THE majority of U.S.
students who have been studying medicine in Cuba
have returned to their country over the last few
days, fearing that they will be imprisoned or fined
as a result of the Bush administration’s new
measures against the island.
On June 25, the Office for
Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) warned them that they
could remain in Cuba until August 1. Curiously, the
students did not receive this information in time
and have missed their end-of-year exams as a result.
James Cason, head of
Washington’s Special Interests Section in Havana,
stated that he wasn’t aware of the students’ sudden
departure, reported The Sun Sentinel daily.
“It wasn’t our intention,” he confirmed. “I guess we’ll
have to get word to them somehow,” he said.
The scholarship program for
young U.S. citizens arose in 1999, when Democrat
representative Benny Thompson asked President Fidel
Castro for help in finding a solution to the lack of
doctors in his Mississippi Delta district. One year
later, the Cuban president offered a plan of study
for individuals unable to pay to study for a medical
degree in the United States.
Prior to the White House
dictating their recent anti-Cuban measures, there
were 80 U.S. students on the course. "Now they're
telling us to leave. What are we supposed to do?"
asked 26-year old Naketa Thomas from New York. "I
think it's unfair. We're all here because we could
not pay the tuition they charge in the United States,”
she added.
For his part, Reverend
Lucius Walker, director of Pastors for Peace and one
of the main promoters of the program, said he
believed that the Bush government should exempt the
students from the restrictions. “They’re not
terrorists. They’re not agents. They’re simply young
kids who come from humble backgrounds,” he stressed.
The Republican
administration has justified its new sanctions using
the pretext of weakening Fidel Castro. But what’s
clear is that the measures have already provoked
fierce protests in the United States itself by those
who know that the effects go much further than a
confrontation with the island.
HAVANA -- American medical
students in Cuba have rushed back to the United
States, missing their final exams, over fears that
U.S. authorities will jail them, fine them
thousands of dollars, or revoke their citizenship
for studying medicine on the island.
New Bush administration
measures that took effect June 30 severely restrict
Americans' presence on the island.
The Office of Foreign Assets
Control, an arm of the Treasury Department, issued a
letter June 25 saying the students could stay until
Aug. 1. But many students didn't get the word in
time.
"The majority of the
students have left," said one student, Naketa
Thomas, 26, of New York. James Cason, the top U.S.
diplomat in Cuba, said he wasn't aware the
American students were cutting their educations
short.
"It wasn't our intention,"
he said. "We'll have to get word to them somehow."
Before the frenzied
departures there were nearly 80 American medical
students in the country. Few remain, perhaps half a
dozen, American students say.
Inspiration for the program
goes back to 1999, when U.S. Rep. Benny Thompson,
D-Miss., told Cuban President Fidel Castro that
there were few doctors in his district in the
Mississippi Delta.
In September 2000, Castro
told a crowd at Riverside Church in New York City
that he would give scholarships to underprivileged
Americans who couldn't afford medical school. The
Cuban government would pay the costs of the six-year
program, Castro said. The only catch: After the
students graduated, they would have to practice
medicine - at least for a time - in their own needy
neighborhoods.
Hundreds of Americans
applied for the program. At least a dozen of those
who initially arrived dropped out because they
couldn't stand the conditions at Havana's Latin
America School for Medical Sciences.
Eight to 14 students are
packed into each dorm room, sleeping in bunk beds.
The food isn't always edible. There's no air
conditioning and the toilets have no seats, students
say.
"Conditions are really basic,"
Thomas said. "The water is cut off at 11 p.m. Some
students don't like that. ... I say: `We're in Cuba.
Fill a bucket with water and
take your bath whenever you want.'
"Thomas said she
doesn't mind the conditions. She's grateful for the
chance to get a medical degree and not pay the
$100,000 to $200,000 it can cost at home.
The Rev. Lucius Walker Jr.,
executive director of the Interreligious Foundation
for Community Organizing in New York, which has
recruited students for the program, said: "It's not
a good situation. I'd like the U.S. government to
come to its senses and exempt these students from
the restrictions. They're not terrorists. They're
not agents.
They're simple ordinary kids
from humble backgrounds."
The U.S. measures to
restrict travel to Cuba are "devastating, cruel and
damaging," he said. "These regulations are hurting
these kids.
If the intent is to punish
Cuba or somehow force Cuba to do whatever the U.S.
wants it to do, it's not working."
Bush administration
officials say they are restricting travel to Cuba to
cut off the flow of hard currency to the island.
Email story
Print story
HAVANA -- American medical
students in Cuba have rushed back to the United
States, missing their final exams, over fears that
U.S.
authorities will jail them,
fine them thousands of dollars, or revoke their
citizenship for studying medicine on the island.
New Bush administration
measures that took effect June 30 severely restrict
Americans' presence on the island.
The Office of Foreign Assets
Control, an arm of the Treasury Department, issued a
letter June 25 saying the students could stay until
Aug. 1. But many students didn't get the word in
time.
"The majority of the
students have left," said one student, Naketa
Thomas, 26, of New York.
James Cason, the top U.S.
diplomat in Cuba, said he wasn't aware the American
students were cutting their educations short.
"It wasn't our intention,"
he said. "We'll have to get word to them somehow."
Before the frenzied
departures there were nearly 80 American medical
students in the country. Few remain, perhaps half a
dozen, American students say.
Inspiration for the program
goes back to 1999, when U.S. Rep. Benny Thompson,
D-Miss., told Cuban President Fidel Castro that
there were few doctors in his district in the
Mississippi Delta.
In September 2000, Castro
told a crowd at Riverside Church in New York City
that he would give scholarships to underprivileged
Americans who couldn't afford medical school. The
Cuban government would pay the costs of the six-year
program, Castro said. The only catch: After the
students graduated, they would have to practice
medicine - at least for a time - in their own needy
neighborhoods.
Hundreds of Americans
applied for the program. At least a dozen of those
who initially arrived dropped out because they
couldn't stand the conditions at Havana's Latin
America School for Medical Sciences.
Eight to 14 students are
packed into each dorm room, sleeping in bunk beds.
The food isn't always edible. There's no air
conditioning and the toilets have no seats, students
say.
"Conditions are really basic,"
Thomas said. "The water is cut off at 11 p.m. Some
students don't like that. ... I say: `We're in Cuba.
Fill a bucket with water and
take your bath whenever you want.' "
Thomas said she doesn't mind
the conditions. She's grateful for the chance to get
a medical degree and not pay the $100,000 to
$200,000 it can cost at home.
HAVANA -- American medical
students in Cuba have rushed back to the United
States, missing their final exams, over fears that
U.S. authorities will jail them, fine them thousands
of dollars, or revoke their citizenship for studying
medicine on the island.
New Bush administration
measures that took effect June 30 severely restrict
Americans' presence on the island.
The Office of Foreign Assets
Control, an arm of the Treasury Department, issued a
letter June 25 saying the students could stay until
Aug. 1. But many students didn't get the word in
time.
"The majority of the
students have left," said one student, Naketa
Thomas, 26, of New York.
James Cason, the top U.S.
diplomat in Cuba, said he wasn't aware the American
students were cutting their educations short.
"It wasn't our intention,"
he said. "We'll have to get word to them somehow."
Before the frenzied
departures there were nearly 80 American medical
students in the country. Few remain, perhaps half a
dozen, American students say.
Inspiration for the program
goes back to 1999, when U.S. Rep. Benny Thompson,
D-Miss., told Cuban President Fidel Castro that
there were few doctors in his district in the
Mississippi Delta.
In September 2000, Castro
told a crowd at Riverside Church in New York City
that he would give scholarships to underprivileged
Americans who couldn't afford medical school. The
Cuban government would pay the costs of the six-year
program, Castro said. The only catch: After the
students graduated, they would have to practice
medicine - at least for a time - in their own needy
neighborhoods.
Hundreds of Americans
applied for the program. At least a dozen of those
who initially arrived dropped out because they
couldn't stand the conditions at Havana's Latin
America School for Medical Sciences.
Eight to 14 students are
packed into each dorm room, sleeping in bunk beds.
The food isn't always edible. There's no air
conditioning and the toilets have no seats, students
say.
"Conditions are really basic,"
Thomas said. "The water is cut off at 11 p.m. Some
students don't like that. ... I say: `We're in Cuba.
Fill a bucket with water and
take your bath whenever you want.' "
Thomas said she doesn't mind
the conditions. She's grateful for the chance to get
a medical degree and not pay the $100,000 to
$200,000 it can cost at home.
"Now they're telling us to
leave. What are we supposed to do?" she asked. "I
think it's unfair. We're all here because we could
not pay the tuition they charge in the United States."
The Rev. Lucius Walker Jr.,
executive director of the Interreligious Foundation
for Community Organizing in New York, which has
recruited students for the program, said: "It's not
a good situation. I'd like the U.S. government to
come to its senses and exempt these students from
the restrictions. They're not terrorists. They're
not agents.
They're simple ordinary kids
from humble backgrounds."
The U.S. measures to
restrict travel to Cuba are "devastating, cruel and
damaging," he said. "These regulations are hurting
these kids.
If the intent is to punish
Cuba or somehow force Cuba to do whatever the U.S.
wants it to do, it's not working."
Bush administration
officials say they are restricting travel to Cuba to
cut off the flow of hard currency to the island.
Email story
Print story
The Rev. Lucius Walker Jr.,
executive director of the Interreligious Foundation
for Community Organizing in New York, which has
recruited students for the program, said: "It's not
a good situation. I'd like the U.S. government to
come to its senses and exempt these students from
the restrictions. They're not terrorists. They're
not agents.
They're simple ordinary kids
from humble backgrounds."The U.S. measures to
restrict travel to Cuba are "devastating, cruel and
damaging," he said. "These regulations are hurting
these kids.
If the intent is to punish
Cuba or somehow force Cuba to do whatever the U.S.
wants it to do, it's not working."
Bush administration
officials say they are restricting travel to Cuba to
cut off the flow of hard currency to the island.
Email story
Print story
|