From: "Walter Lippmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2001 06:33:05 -0700
To: "CubaNews" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [CubaNews] U.S. tightens Cuban embargo

U.S. tightens Cuban embargo
By Rafael Lorente
Washington Bureau

July 5, 2001

WASHINGTON � The Bush Administration appears to be increasing
enforcement of parts of the economic embargo against Cuba this
year, denying visas to Cuban officials wanting to come to this
country and more carefully scrutinizing Americans who fly to
the island through third countries like Canada.

The crackdown is angering proponents of people-to-people
contact who generally had a lot of leeway under the Clinton
Administration, but is applauded by the Cuban American
National Foundation.

The motivation is unclear. It could be a political payoff to
South Florida's Cuban-American community, which was key in
helping President Bush get elected last year. It could also be
a way of placating Cuban-Americans in anticipation that Bush
will continue to waive a trade-related portion of the
Helms-Burton Act this month.

"Everything about Cuba is a political consideration," said
William Goodfellow, an embargo critic and executive director
of the Center for International Policy. But Goodfellow said
the tightening could also be bureaucrats responding to what
they think the Bush Administration, which has been openly
supportive of the embargo, wants.

In June, the State Department denied visas for eight Cuban
officials coming to a meeting of the U.S.-Cuba Sister Cities
Association in Bloomington, Ind., and three officials
traveling to Washington for a trademarks conference.

"The Bush Administration, pressured by the hardliners in the
Cuban-American community, obviously doesn't believe in the
people-to-people programs," said Wayne Smith, former head of
the U.S. Interests Section in Havana and a fellow at the
Center for International Policy.

Smith, who organized the trademarks conference, wrote a letter
of protest to the State Department.

Lawyers representing Americans who have gotten in trouble for
traveling to Cuba say there has been a marked increase in
enforcement by the U.S. Treasury Department.

Nancy Chang, a lawyer with the Center for Constitutional
Rights in New York, which defends Americans accused of
violating travel restrictions to Cuba, said it has about 400
current cases and has stopped taking any more. Chang
said her group, which received about 12 calls a month
last year, is up to about 20 a month this year.

"The number of enforcement cases has increased
over the last five months," she said.

Arthur Heitzer, a Milwaukee lawyer who chairs the Cuba
subcommittee for the National Lawyers Guild, said he
has had more referrals of people in trouble with the
Treasury Department.

"It appears that they are escalating their threats and
intimidation of people who have traveled to Cuba,"
Heitzer said.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control in the U.S. Treasury,
which enforces the embargo, said any changes in
enforcement are coincidental.

`No shift in policy'

"OFAC acknowledges that there may be a higher incidence of
penalty cases being issued at this time," said Tasia
Scoilinos, a spokeswoman for the Treasury Department. "This
figure is attributed solely to the normal ebb and flow of
OFAC's workload rather than a shift in policy."

The State Department said it was "looking very carefully at
visa applications from Cuban government officials."

Without calling it a crackdown, a State Department official
said the rejection of visas for Cuban officials is a way of
leveling the playing field between the two countries. Cuban
officials in the United States can meet with anyone they want.
But American officials based in Havana must get permission to
meet with even the lowest ranking government officials.

"Part of this is the difference between a police state and a
free society," said the official, who asked not to be
identified.

Luis Fernandez, a spokesman for the Cuban Interests Section in
Washington, said the increased enforcement is an attempt to
further isolate Cuba and tighten the embargo.

"There is a real attempt to block all contacts," Fernandez
said.

Americans who do not qualify for one of a limited number of
licenses allowing them to legally fly directly from the United
States usually travel via Canada, Mexico or the Bahamas. If
they are caught by Customs agents on their way back to the
United States, American travelers may be questioned in writing
about their trips. Many are later told to pay a hefty fine,
about $7,500, or ask for a hearing before an administrative
law judge.

One such letter, sent out in May and provided to the
Sun-Sentinel, read in part: "You were observed by U.S. Customs
Service Inspectors ... at Dorval International Airport in
Montreal, Canada, as you arrived on a Cubana de Aviacion
airlines flight from Havana, Cuba. During your inspection by
U.S. Customs you repeatedly denied that you had traveled to
Cuba. You also claimed not to have a passport. Customs
inspectors searched your belongings, and your person, and
found clothing inconsistent with travel to Canada."

The letter asked the passenger to supply details of the trip
within 20 business days.

John Kavulich, president of the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic
Council in New York, said the crackdown on unauthorized travel
actually started in the final days of the Clinton Administration.
Part of the focus was fully hosted travel, where Americans
avoid violating the embargo because someone else pays
their expenses.

`Keeping promises'

But Joe Garcia, executive director of the Cuban American
National Foundation, said Bush is simply keeping his promises.

"This administration committed to us to try to enforce U.S.
law before it came to power and after it came to power,"
Garcia said. "We are very pleased with the actions on Cuba
policy thus far."

Garcia said the crackdown on Cuban government officials was
overdue. Under the Clinton Administration, they could travel
anywhere in the country to campaign for a change in U.S.
policy.

"The former administration tried to get the embargo lifted by
using the Cuban government as a lobbying tool," Garcia said.

American groups that travel to Cuba or invite Cubans to the
United States are angry. They see travel restrictions as an
infringement on their rights of freedom of movement and
association as Americans.

"Americans need to see this not as an issue of Cuba, but as an
issue of civil rights," said Lisa Valanti, president of the
national U.S.-Cuba Sister Cities Association, whose group had
invitees denied visas.

Travelers not deterred

The Rev. Lucius Walker of Pastors for Peace, a group that
regularly sends aid to Cuba, said people who have traveled
with him have received more enforcement letters recently.
But he said the letters are not deterring travelers.

"People are still going by the thousands, and they must know
that," said Walker,who arrived in Cuba on Wednesday ahead
of a delivery of 80 tons of humanitarian aid.

Rafael Lorente can be reached at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
or 202-824-8225 in Washington.


Copyright � 2001, South Florida Sun-Sentinel



_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________


















Reply via email to