Yahoo – AFP,
Diego Urdaneta, 18 July 2015
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A sign
shows the departure times for flights to Cuba at Miami International
Airport on
December 19, 2014 in Miami, Florida (AFP Photo/Joe Raedle)
|
Miami (AFP)
- The flight from Miami to Havana takes just 45 minutes, but the passengers
lining up to check in are hardly traveling light.
They are
lugging big TVs, bulky bags of non-perishable food like canned goods and even
automobile tires.
And most
are burdened with big, heavy suitcases, too, packed with stuff that relatives
on the poor communist-run island cannot find or cannot afford. And for now,
these trips can only be made on expensive charter flights.
But with
Cuba and the United States due to open embassies Monday as they restore
diplomatic ties, Cubans making the trek back to the island hope it will be
easier and cheaper to help their families there.
"So
long as there are relations, it is going to be better for the people,"
said Ernesto Rodriguez, 47, one of the Cuban emigres waiting to check in for a
flight to Havana.
He has
lived in the United States for more than a decade, and makes the trip back home
every two years.
This time,
his bulky luggage is loaded mainly with clothes for his 23-year-old son, a
physical education teacher in Cuba.
Rodriguez
left his family behind 12 years ago when he came to America to try his luck, as
do thousands of Cubans every year. Rodriguez now works for an import-export
company.
He said
that with the agreement announced this month to restore relations after a
50-year hiatus dating back to the height of the Cold War, it might be easier to
travel to the island more often.
"The
situation is chaotic" on the island from an economic standpoint, said
Rodriguez. So he takes with him as much as he can on each trip.
Expensive
air fares
In the line
to check in on this charter flight, one of several that take off from Miami
every day for Havana and other Cuban cities, just about everybody is lugging
huge suitcases.
Rodriguez,
like many Cuban Americans who travel home without restrictions, complains of
the high cost of the charter flights -- the only ones that currently go
directly from the US to Cuba.
The flight
costs about $500 for a trip of less than an hour. By comparison, a three-hour
flight to JFK airport in New York can go for as little as $200.
Rodriguez
says he is excited about news that there may be ferry service to Cuba later
this year, and more airlines flying to the island.
"The
fares are very expensive. They are sure to come down once there are more
options," Rodriguez said.
Javier
Rodriguez, another Cuban traveler, aged 50, also expressed hope the new
US-Cuban relationship will mean more Cubans visiting relatives back home.
He also
sees more trips by Americans, currently barred from traveling to Cuba as mere
tourists.
Instead,
they have to fit into one of 12 special categories such as travel for academic,
cultural, sports or religious reasons.
With more
visitors, "of course people benefit. The government benefits, but so do
everyday Cubans," said Rodriguez.
"There
is a lot of contact between tourists and the Cuban people. In one way or
another there are benefits."
Rodriguez
lives in Miami, home to about half of the two million Cubans who reside in the
United States.
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Tourists
from the United States are seen in old American cars in Havana, on
April 6,
2015 (AFP Photo/Yamil Lage)
|
He got here
about two years ago and was headed home for the first time with his wife and
teenage daughter to see relatives.
But his
people in Havana tell him that "so far, you do not see much change,"
Rodriguez said.
New
travelers
But not
everyone is brimming with hope.
A man in
line who identified himself only as Luis said the restoration of relations will
have no impact.
"Of
course not," he said, refusing to comment further out of fear he might get
in trouble for it in Cuba.
Indeed,
after a half century of enmity and suspicion, many Cuban-Americans are
distrustful. Many of those waiting to board the flight to Havana refused to
speak to AFP.
But some
Cubans who traveled in the other direction to visit relatives in the United
States did express optimism.
"Many
Cubans here who have never gone to Cuba so far will probably want to go,"
especially if the air fares come down, said Ana Maria Urizarri, a retired
teacher aged 72.
She was
returning to Havana after staying in the US for two months to see her sister.
"Cuba
was always paradise," said Urizarri, adding that having more Americans
visit the island will bring prosperity.



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