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Cubans starting families in Guyana

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A group of Cubans shopping in downtown Georgetown (Delano Williams photo)

HE seemed uneasy, fiddling with his mobile phone as he tried his best to understand the Spanish text messages being sent from the other end. His friend sat nearby with a concerned look on his face. And as the morning stretched on, it appeared as if their business meeting with their Cuban friend was off. Dejected, he asked anyone around if they can speak Spanish.

Downtown in this King Street, Georgetown edifice, the marriage officers have been busy fixing arranged marriages, a new trend of foreign nationals, mainly Cubans, seeking a prospective “husband” in Guyana in a business which has been growing annually since 2015.

Outside the building, a woman approaches this reporter. “JP, want a JP?” she asks and willingly provides information on the requirements for processing various documents, even notarised marriage applications.

One marriage officer told the Guyana Chronicle that he has been receiving many requests from local men seeking marriage to the foreigners.

“Since 2014 and early part 2015, they came to my office seeking advice on marriage, but I found out it’s a business,” the man said on condition of anonymity.

At another office, the marriage officer said he processed many applications for the new unions. He said that the foreign women pay as much as US$6000 in the arrangement. “The least they pay is US$4000, because is the locals calling the shots,” he added.

The process by which one obtains a marriage licence in Guyana can be lengthy but straight forward.

First, both parties must fill an application form obtained from the Guyana Post Office Corporation (GPOC) and take it to a Justice of the Peace, who will notarize the application.
By requirement, the parties must then submit the completed form along with required documents such as identification cards (passports for foreigners) to the Marriage Section of the General Register Office. A date is then provided for when the licence can be uplifted.
It is then taken by the prospective married couple to the marriage officer who will perform the marriage ceremony.

Cubans do not need visas to travel to Guyana. In November 2016, the Guyana Chronicle reported that some 300 Cubans visit Guyana weekly. By June 2018, the number had more than doubled. At that time, this publication had reported that some 700 Cubans visit these shores every week and are contributing to this country’s economy, a move aimed at strengthening trade between the two nations.

In the past, Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge had noted that the Spanish-speaking nationals come here mainly for tourism purposes.

But while many travel here for business and tourism, others come with a wider objective — to obtain immigrant visas.

Cubans have been flocking to Guyana in droves to get such visas ever since Washington decided to transfer the processing of visa applications for Cubans from Colombia to Guyana.

“On April 1, we will begin transferring current immigrant visa applications and scheduling immigrant visa interviews for Cuban nationals at U.S. Embassy Georgetown, Guyana. Guyana will then be the primary site for processing immigrant visa applications for Cubans. The first interviews will take place in June,” the State Department announced in March this year on its website.

Statistics provided by Minister of Citizenship Winston Felix to the bipartisan parliamentary Foreign Relations Committee, illustrates that there are no departure records for 7,255 of the 44,747 Cubans who travelled to Guyana last year. And of the 22,520 who entered Guyana from January to April of 2018, a total of 6,170 did not lodge any departure records with immigration authorities.

Along Regent Street and King Street, some Cubans who have taken up jobs here have been capitalising on the relations between the two countries, including in trade. They can be seen outside stores where they act as middlemen for other Cubans doing business here, especially first-timers.

Others make arrangements with local taxi and minibus drivers to transport their fellow countrymen/women to and from the airports. Others meantime, tie up other forms of business, including marriage, the new trend in town.

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Why would a Cuban want to live in Guyana, a third world country that does not have free education like their own country when they can easily walk into the American embassy in Georgetown and ask for political asylum in the USA. It does not make any sense.  

Prashad is a born Guyanese yet he cannot get a Guyanese passport to travel because he is not considered a Guyanese citizen.  It is ridiculous.   

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad
Prashad posted:

Prashad is a born Guyanese yet he cannot get a Guyanese passport to travel because he is not considered a Guyanese citizen.  It is ridiculous.   

nonsense! . . . talking for talk sake

simply not true

FM

Ronan, did you ever check the Guyana constitution? You are not allowed dual citizenship. Please give back your illegal Guyana passport to the nearest Guyana consulate or run the risk of being changed for traveling on an illegal document. 

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad

Countries that allow dual citizenship under limited circumstances

Guyana. – MAYBE

Guyana accepts dual citizenship only for those who gain foreign citizenship through marriage.

Reference: Dual citizenship is not recognized unless the second citizenship is obtained through marriage. The President may “by order” deprive an individual of Guyanese citizenship if he or she acquires the citizenship of another state in any other voluntary or formal manner, or if he or she exercises any exclusive rights granted to citizens of another country which are voluntarily claimed and exercised in that other country. Reference here.

Countries that do not allow dual citizenship

Cuba. – NO

Cuba does not recognize dual citizenship.

Reference: Dual citizenship is not recognized. Therefore, when a foreign citizenship is acquired, the Cuban one will be lost. Formalization of the loss of citizenship and the authorities empowered to decide on this is prescribed by law. Reference here.

Reference --- https://www.justice.gov/sites/...2/04/GUY102892.E.pdf

===========================

NOTE

Dual citizenship is allowed in Guyana under specific circumstances.

One of the conditions relates to those individuals who, through marriage before the constitution was established in 1980, retain the right to dual citizenship.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

That is what I have been saying. I think anyone who is using a Guyanese passport to travel and got dual citizenship after 1980 is not using a valid passport because Guyana's constitution does not recognize dual citizenship after 1980, therefore, you have lost your Guyana citizenship. That can be a jail sentence in some countries for using a passport that is not valid.

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad

Prash, then that means many posters who have US, Canadian, British etc...citizenships are no longer "Guyanese".  And what about Members of Parliament, who might holding US or Canadian passports?

Mitwah
Pointblank posted:

Cubans starting families in Guyana

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A group of Cubans shopping in downtown Georgetown (Delano Williams photo)

HE seemed uneasy, fiddling with his mobile phone as he tried his best to understand the Spanish text messages being sent from the other end. His friend sat nearby with a concerned look on his face. And as the morning stretched on, it appeared as if their business meeting with their Cuban friend was off. Dejected, he asked anyone around if they can speak Spanish.

Downtown in this King Street, Georgetown edifice, the marriage officers have been busy fixing arranged marriages, a new trend of foreign nationals, mainly Cubans, seeking a prospective “husband” in Guyana in a business which has been growing annually since 2015.

Outside the building, a woman approaches this reporter. “JP, want a JP?” she asks and willingly provides information on the requirements for processing various documents, even notarised marriage applications.

One marriage officer told the Guyana Chronicle that he has been receiving many requests from local men seeking marriage to the foreigners.

“Since 2014 and early part 2015, they came to my office seeking advice on marriage, but I found out it’s a business,” the man said on condition of anonymity.

At another office, the marriage officer said he processed many applications for the new unions. He said that the foreign women pay as much as US$6000 in the arrangement. “The least they pay is US$4000, because is the locals calling the shots,” he added.

The process by which one obtains a marriage licence in Guyana can be lengthy but straight forward.

First, both parties must fill an application form obtained from the Guyana Post Office Corporation (GPOC) and take it to a Justice of the Peace, who will notarize the application.
By requirement, the parties must then submit the completed form along with required documents such as identification cards (passports for foreigners) to the Marriage Section of the General Register Office. A date is then provided for when the licence can be uplifted.
It is then taken by the prospective married couple to the marriage officer who will perform the marriage ceremony.

Cubans do not need visas to travel to Guyana. In November 2016, the Guyana Chronicle reported that some 300 Cubans visit Guyana weekly. By June 2018, the number had more than doubled. At that time, this publication had reported that some 700 Cubans visit these shores every week and are contributing to this country’s economy, a move aimed at strengthening trade between the two nations.

In the past, Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge had noted that the Spanish-speaking nationals come here mainly for tourism purposes.

But while many travel here for business and tourism, others come with a wider objective — to obtain immigrant visas.

Cubans have been flocking to Guyana in droves to get such visas ever since Washington decided to transfer the processing of visa applications for Cubans from Colombia to Guyana.

“On April 1, we will begin transferring current immigrant visa applications and scheduling immigrant visa interviews for Cuban nationals at U.S. Embassy Georgetown, Guyana. Guyana will then be the primary site for processing immigrant visa applications for Cubans. The first interviews will take place in June,” the State Department announced in March this year on its website.

Statistics provided by Minister of Citizenship Winston Felix to the bipartisan parliamentary Foreign Relations Committee, illustrates that there are no departure records for 7,255 of the 44,747 Cubans who travelled to Guyana last year. And of the 22,520 who entered Guyana from January to April of 2018, a total of 6,170 did not lodge any departure records with immigration authorities.

Along Regent Street and King Street, some Cubans who have taken up jobs here have been capitalising on the relations between the two countries, including in trade. They can be seen outside stores where they act as middlemen for other Cubans doing business here, especially first-timers.

Others make arrangements with local taxi and minibus drivers to transport their fellow countrymen/women to and from the airports. Others meantime, tie up other forms of business, including marriage, the new trend in town.

Seems like Guyana is open for business. The more tourism, the better.  It is time to erase   the negativity of the Jonestown Massacre and as Desmond Hoyte once said in Washington DC "promote the good name of Guyana".

 

Reza R.  Rahaman
Prashad posted:

Why would a Cuban want to live in Guyana, a third world country that does not have free education like their own country when they can easily walk into the American embassy in Georgetown and ask for political asylum in the USA. It does not make any sense.  

Prashad is a born Guyanese yet he cannot get a Guyanese passport to travel because he is not considered a Guyanese citizen.  It is ridiculous.   

Dem people think you are a brown Arab. Why you need a passport to travel to your own country? Besides when you establish our country, we will have restricted borders and only people with certain physical traits will be allowed to enter.

FM

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