Wave of 500 migrants invade Florida Keys: Dry Tortugas National Park is CLOSED as boatloads arrive from Cuba due to soaring inflation and food shortages
- Hundreds of migrants from Cuba fled to Florida keys by boat over the weekend
- Cuba is dealing with high inflation, economic turmoil and food shortages
- Officials at Dry Tortugas National Park shut down the park to attend to migrants
- South Florida has experienced an escalation of migrants in the past decade
At least 500 migrants have arrived in small boats along the Florida Keys over the last several days in what the local sheriff’s office described on Monday as a ‘crisis.’
Economic turmoil, food shortages and soaring inflation in Cuba and other parts of the Caribbean is spurring the most recent wave of migration.
Over the weekend, 300 migrants arrived at the sparsely populated Dry Tortugas National Park, about 70 miles west of Key West.
Separately, 160 migrants arrived by boats in other parts of the Florida Keys over the New Year’s Day weekend, officials said.
On Monday, 30 people in two new groups of migrants were found in the Middle Keys.
The park was closed so that law enforcement and medical personnel could evaluate the group before moving them to Key West, the park tweeted.
About 300 migrants from Cuba arrived at Florida Keys over the weekend. An empty raft was seen stranded off of Sombrero beach
Cuba is dealing with high inflation, economic turmoil and food shortages
In a news release, Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsay criticized the federal response to the uptick in migrant arrivals, saying they were stretching local resources.
U.S. Border Patrol told the sheriff’s office that the federal response to some of the migrants arriving may have to wait a day, the news release said.
‘Refugee arrivals require a lot of resources from the Sheriff’s Office as we help our federal law enforcement partners ensure the migrants are in good health and safe,’ Ramsay said, whose office’s jurisdiction encompasses the Florida Keys.
‘This shows a lack of a working plan by the federal government to deal with a mass migration issue that was foreseeable.’
Officials at Dry Tortugas National Park said they expected it to be closed for several days because of the space and resources needed to attend to the migrants.
The national park is at the southern tip of the continental U.S. – and attracts scuba divers and snorkelers for its coral reefs, nesting sea turtles, tropical fish and shipwrecks.
‘Like elsewhere in the Florida Keys, the park has recently seen an increase in people arriving by boat from Cuba and landing on the islands of Dry Tortugas National Park,’ the National Park Service said in a news release.
South Florida has experienced an escalation of migrants in the past decade
Jorge Yunier Cepa Sanchez showed off a compass he used to help lead the migrants to Florida
Officials at Dry Tortugas National Park shut down the park to attend to migrants
A group of Cuban migrants were seen standing in the sun while in the middle of Duck Key, Florida
About 6,180 Cubans were intercepted at sea by the US Coast Guard in the 2022 fiscal year that ended in September. Another group of migrants were seen hanging out in Duck Key on Monday
In addition to landing at the national park over the weekend, 160 other migrants arrived in the Middle and Upper Keys. At least 88 of the migrants are from Cuba, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said in a tweet.
U.S. Border Patrol and Coast Guard crews patrolling South Florida and the Keys have been experiencing the largest escalation of migrations by boat in nearly a decade, with hundreds of interceptions in recent months, mostly of people from Cuba and Haiti.
About 6,180 Cubans were intercepted at sea by the US Coast Guard in the 2022 fiscal year, according to Reuters. The fiscal year ended in September, but 3,000 more migrants arrived in mid-December.
Meanwhile, 220,000 Cubans were caught after fleeing to the US-Mexico border last year.
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