The
elements are all there in this Herald
report: the child is in the United States, the mother deceased, the father in
Cuba and described in the press as the mother’s husband, he wants custody and a
Miami relative has it temporarily. One difference is that the child, born in
the United States, can become a U.S. citizen by birth and a Cuban citizen by
parentage. Another difference may be that the father would rather live here
than there; from the Herald story, it seems that a visa application was in the
works.
The
Elian case turned into a political battle, but what mattered in the end was the
principle – which the U.S. government asserts all around the world when
American parents are separated from their kids – that if a minor child has one
fit parent, then parent and child should be united.
We’ll
see how this one turns out.
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