Immigration

About 2,000 migrants from Haiti and Cuba have made the risky trip to Florida since October

About 2,000 migrants from Haiti and Cuba have risked their lives sailing to Florida to flee from political and economic turmoil in their home countries since Oct. 1, according to federal authorities.

On Sunday afternoon, over 350 migrants from Haiti arrived in an overloaded wooden boat that grounded offshore from an exclusive gated community in northern Key Largo, the U.S. Coast Guard said in a statement the next day. In videos posted on social media, many were seen trying to swim to shore.

In about five months, from Oct. 1 of last year to the first week of March, the Coast Guard has stopped 1,152 Haitians at sea, the military branch said.

The federal government tracks migration by the fiscal year, which begins and ends Oct. 1 of every calendar year. Maritime migration from both Haiti and Cuba saw a significant bump last fiscal year compared to the year before. And, if migration between both nations and South Florida continues on its current trajectory, look for fiscal year 2022 to end with numbers not seen in years.

In response to the spike, the Coast Guard and U.S. Customs and Border Protection have been urging would-be migrants not to take to the sea because of the potential perils. Several recent migrations have turned tragic, including when a boat capsized between the Bahamas and Fort Pierce Inlet in late January, resulting in the deaths of 39 people from various countries seeking a new home in the U.S.

A wooden boat packed with migrants from Haiti arrived in the shallow waters off Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo Sunday, March 6, 2022.
A wooden boat packed with migrants from Haiti arrived in the shallow waters off Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo Sunday, March 6, 2022. U.S. Coast Guard

The following are the latest figures from the Coast Guard of Haitian migrants stopped at sea:

  • 2021 fiscal year: 1,527 Haitian migrants
  • 2020 fiscal year: 418 Haitian migrants

  • 2019 fiscal year: 932 Haitian migrants

  • 2018 fiscal year: 609 Haitian migrants

  • 2017 fiscal year: 419 Haitian migrants

Since Oct. 1 of last year, the Coast Guard has intercepted more than 850 Cuban migrants, the military branch said this week. Halfway through the fiscal year, these numbers already topped fiscal year 2021.

The following are the latest figures from the Coast Guard of Cuban migrants stopped at sea:

  • 2021 fiscal year: 838 Cuban migrants
  • 2020 fiscal year: 49 Cuban migrants
  • 2019 fiscal year: 313 Cuban migrants
  • 2018 fiscal year: 259 Cuban migrants
  • 2017 fiscal year: 1,468 Cuban migrants
A makeshift pontoon boat is docked moored behind a neighborhood in the city of Marathon in the Florida Keys Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2022. Ten men from Cuba were on the vessel, according to the U.S. Border Patrol.
A makeshift pontoon boat is docked moored behind a neighborhood in the city of Marathon in the Florida Keys Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2022. Ten men from Cuba were on the vessel, according to the U.S. Border Patrol. U.S. Border Patrol

Migrant interceptions off Florida’s coast in 2022

Here are the most recent migrant interceptions off the Florida coast this year as reported by federal authorities:

A wooden fishing boat floats in shallow water off Key West Sunday, Feb. 27, 2022. The Border Patrol said 13 people arrived on the vessel.
A wooden fishing boat floats in shallow water off Key West Sunday, Feb. 27, 2022. The Border Patrol said 13 people arrived on the vessel. U.S. Border Patrol

FLKeysNews and MiamiHerald.com staff writer David Goodhue contributed to this report.

This story was originally published March 7, 2022 at 11:42 AM.

Omar Rodríguez Ortiz
Miami Herald
Omar is a bilingual and bicultural journalist, covering breaking news in South Florida for the Miami Herald. He has a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Texas at Austin and a bachelor’s degree in education from the Universidad de Puerto Rico en Río Piedras.
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