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First group of white South Africans arrive in US for resettlement
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Trump mulls joining Ukraine talks in Turkey, Kremlin silent on Putin
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US, China agree to slash tariffs as Trump says will speak to Xi
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Spanish rider Landa returns home for 'long recovery' after Giro crash
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Kurdish militant group PKK ends decades of armed struggle
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Trump says would be 'stupid' to reject Qatari Air Force One gift
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Uruguay's ex-president Mujica receiving palliative care: wife
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Remainder of IPL to be held between May 17-June 3 after ceasefire
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Hamas frees US-Israeli hostage
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Trump defends resettling white South Africans as refugees in US
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Sean 'Diddy' Combs was 'coercive and criminal,' jury hears
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Nazi files found in champagne crates in Argentine court basement
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Myanmar junta airstrike kills 22 at school: witnesses
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Zelensky wants Trump at peace talks, Russia silent on whether Putin will go
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Ground-breaking Grand National winner Blackmore retires
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Trump heads on major Middle East tour
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Nepal holds tribute for disappearing glacier
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Sinner eases into Italian Open last 16, Osaka dumped out
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Real Madrid duo Vinicius, Vazquez injured
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Indian PM Modi vows strong response to any future 'terrorist attack'
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Opening statements start in Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial
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Ancelotti to leave Real Madrid for Brazil job
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Trump announces drug prices cut with swipe at Europe
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Ancelotti exits Madrid, hoping to add World Cup with Brazil
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US, China agree to slash tariffs as Trump says to speak with Xi soon
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Ancelotti to take over as Brazil coach
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Israel urges ICC to drop arrest warrants against PM
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Poland to close Russian consulate in Krakow over 'sabotage'
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Kremlin rejects Europe's 'ultimatums' for truce with Ukraine
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Ireland rugby captain Doris ruled out for up to six months
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Algerian attack survivor vows to be heard in court battle with award-winning author
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Europa League glory could be 'turning point' for Spurs: Postecoglou
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White S.Africans resettled in US did not face 'persecution': govt
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Gaza faces 'critical risk of famine': UN report
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Indian teams defuse bombs in Kashmir border areas
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Kim Kardashian testifies in Paris multi-million-dollar robbery trial
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Alexander-Arnold exit will not overshadow Liverpool title party: Van Dijk
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Osaka knocked out of Italian Open as fans await Sinner
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France condemns 'fake news' over Europe leaders' cocaine accusation
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Indian PM Modi set to address nation after Pakistan truce
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With Israel ties on the table, UAE offers Saudis an example
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UK urges Putin to 'get serious about peace'
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Leicester Tigers name Parling to replace Cheika as head coach
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UK govt toughens immigration plans as hard-right gains
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Markets rally after China, US slash tariffs
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Leo XIV urges release of jailed journalists as Zelensky invites to Ukraine
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Film legend Bardot backs Depardieu ahead of sexual assault verdict
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Mbappe shows fallen Real Madrid new road to riches

US to reopen consulate in Cuba, hit by 'sonic attacks'
The United States consulate, closed since 2017 following alleged "sonic attacks" against diplomatic staff, will resume a limited service issuing visas, its embassy in Havana said Thursday.
Washington reduced the US mission to the bare minimum five years ago when then-president Donald Trump accused Havana of carrying out "sonic attacks" targeting embassy staff.
US personnel and their families suffered from mystery illnesses subsequently known as "Havana Syndrome." Similar incidences later occurred at other embassies around the world.
A US government report in 2020 said the illnesses were most likely caused by "directed, pulsed radio frequency (RF) energy."
The consulate "will begin the limited resumption of some immigrant visa services, as part of a gradual expansion of the embassy's functions," said Timothy Zuniga-Brown, the charge d'affaires at the US diplomatic mission in Havana.
The consulate closure was a major blow for Cubans wishing to emigrate to the US as it obliged them to tackle numerous obstacles, among them being forced to travel to Colombia or Guyana to submit a request.
"There are a lot of people that want to leave who take a boat to go there (to the US) or through a third country," said Cuban pensioner Felipe Mesa, 75.
Zuniga-Brown said the consulate will only schedule appointments with people that have already presented complete document files. During the transition period, most requests will still have to be made in Guyana's capital Georgetown.
The consular service will also provide essential services to US citizens and emergency non-immigrant visas, he added.
- No warming of relations -
According to existing immigration agreements, the US should authorize 20,000 immigrant visas a year to Cubans.
With Cuba suffering its worst economic crisis in 30 years due to the coronavirus pandemic, most Cubans hoping to emigrate to the US have chosen to do so through the dangerous Central American route where migrants face exploitation by people smugglers.
"The visa services for migrants are a secure and legal way towards family reunification," said Zuniga-Brown, referring to families split between the two countries.
Political scientist Rafael Hernandez says the US failure to honor the migration agreement led to "a type of silent Mariel," in reference to the mass exodus of around 125,000 Cubans to the US in 1980.
He said the number of undocumented Cubans in the US rose from 21,000 in 2019 to 40,000 a year later.
The reduction in US diplomatic staff in Cuba reflected increased tensions between the two countries after Trump succeeded Barack Obama in the White House.
Trump put an end to the improving relationship that had seen Obama approve the re-establishment of bilateral diplomatic relations in 2015.
Many Cubans hoped the election Joe Biden -- Obama's former vice-president -- would improve things, but in vain.
This move "in no way represents a continuity of the Obama policy," said Hernandez, but rather a "rolling back of the atrocities committed" by Trump.
Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank, agreed.
"It would be a mistake to interpret it as the beginning of a significant opening towards the island," he said.
With mid-term US elections due in November, "it is difficult to imagine there would be other changes" in current Washington policy towards Cuba, said Shifter.
The United States has regularly criticized Cuba's communist party leaders over the arrest and conviction of anti-government protesters who took to the streets in unprecedented demonstrations last July.
O.M.Souza--AMWN