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Eight Cuban migrants who were at sea for 16 days are recovering after their makeshift vessel capsized off Florida.
Eight Cuban migrants who were at sea for 16 days are recovering after their makeshift vessel capsized off Florida. Photograph: Martin county sheriff's office/Facebook
Eight Cuban migrants who were at sea for 16 days are recovering after their makeshift vessel capsized off Florida. Photograph: Martin county sheriff's office/Facebook

Eight Cuban migrants rescued after styrofoam boat capsizes off Florida

This article is more than 3 years old

Six men and two pregnant women had been at sea for 16 days in makeshift vessel

Six men and two pregnant women from Cuba have been rescued off the Florida coast after their makeshift styrofoam boat capsized following 16 days at sea, in the latest in a string of incidents involving migrants from the island.

The capsize and interdiction was captured on video on Sunday by authorities, whose rescues of the past few weeks appear to follow a rise in Cuban refugees seeking to reach the United States.

The Martin county sheriff’s office said it received reports of a distressed vessel floating near the shore in Waveland Beach, north of West Palm Beach, on Sunday after sunset.

A helicopter found the vessel and coordinated with the neighboring county’s sheriff to send first responders. Images shared on Facebook by the Martin county sheriff’s office show the vessel – fashioned from styrofoam and metal rods – taking on a large wave and overturning.

Witnesses told news outlets that the boat was powered by a car engine left uncovered at the bottom of the boat.

All eight aboard were rescued and taken to local hospitals, where they were reported in stable condition. Sheriff’s officials said the eight were now in the custody of federal authorities, who would determine their immigration status.

The Coast Guard said that 114 Cuban migrants were interdicted between October 2019 and September 2020 by the agency and other US law enforcement forces. Since October 2020, more than 90 Cuban migrants have been interdicted, according to the agency.

The capsize and interdiction was captured on video by authorities. Photograph: Martin county sheriff's office/Facebook

It was not immediately clear whether the apparent uptick has been due to deteriorating economic conditions in Cuba or some other reason such as migrants expecting changes in immigration policy under the new Democratic administration of Joe Biden.

Just in the past week, the Coast Guard has announced two groups of Cubans were interdicted at sea while traveling in a raft and in a small boat.

On Sunday, the Coast Guard rescued five Cuban men traveling in a raft wrapped with a black tube. They were two miles (3km) south-east of the Lake Worth Inlet, near the Port of Palm Beach.

And last Wednesday, the Coast Guard said, seven Cubans who spent six days at sea were stopped 35 miles (55km) east of West Palm Beach in a 15ft (4.5-meter) vessel made of wood and aluminum that had no motor.

Both groups were repatriated.

The reports follow a rescue earlier this month of three Cubans who capsized and survived 33 days on coconut water, shellfish and rats on a deserted island south of Florida.

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