Stabroek News

Biden says U.S. prepared to send vaccines to Cuba but not ease policy on remittance­s

-

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden said yesterday the United States is prepared to send vaccines to Cuba if it is assured an internatio­nal organizati­on would administer them but he is not considerin­g easing U.S. policy around sending remittance­s to the country.

Thousands of Cubans on Sunday s t a g e d https://www.reuters.com/world/amer icas/street-protests-break-out-cuba2021-07-11 the biggest anti-government protests in decades to demonstrat­e against an economic crisis that has seen shortages of basic goods and power outages. They were also protesting the government's handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and curbs on civil liberties. Dozens of activists were detained.

"I'd be prepared to give significan­t amounts of vaccine, if in fact I was assured an internatio­nal organizati­on would administer those vaccines," Biden told reporters during a press conference after his meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

With regard to remittance­s, or payments Americans can make to their families in Cuba, Biden said he is not going to do that now. Remittance­s to Cuba are believed to be around $2 billion to $3 billion annually and represent Cuba's third biggest source of dollars after the services industry and tourism.

"It is highly likely that the regime would confiscate those remittance­s or a big chunk of it," he said, while calling Cuba a "failed state" that is "repressing their citizens."

Biden also said the White House

is reviewing whether the United States can help Cubans regain internet access after Cuba's government restricted access to social media and messaging platforms including Facebook and WhatsApp amid the protests. On a separate call yesterday, a senior Biden administra­tion official said the United States has contingenc­y plans and a "robust presence" in the Florida Straits if it has to deal with any increased flow of migrants fleeing Cuba by sea.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, reiterated U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas' admonition for Cuban migrants not to head for U.S. shores and said a senior Cuban official's threat of "mass migration" reflects "a lack of care for the lives of Cubans who would risk their lives."

The U.S. official said the protests "will obviously have an impact on how we proceed" with a review of Cuba policy that was launched soon after President Joe Biden took office in January.

"We saw that when we came in that the Cuban regime was actually cracking down much more on the population and that was having a bearing on how we were actually analyzing some of the possible policy responses," the official told reporters on a conference call.

The official said the administra­tion was looking at revising policy with an eye toward helping the Cuban people, not the government of the Communist-ruled island.

But the official stopped short of providing specifics or a timeframe for finishing the review, which had raised hopes of re-engagement with Havana after former President Donald Trump rolled back much of the Obama-era detente between the old Cold War enemies.

Before the protests, Biden's aides had been looking at a range of options, including easing the flow of remittance­s to Cuba and authorizin­g more family travel.

Also under considerat­ion has been whether to lift the designatio­n of Cuba as a "state sponsor of terrorism," a label Trump gave to Havana days prior to leaving office.

The official declined to say whether Cuba would be removed from the list but said Cuba's designatio­n placed a "statutory restrictio­n" on some of the other policy options.

Asked about the prospects for mass migration from Cuba, the official said: "We are actually urging people not to migrate."

 ??  ?? Joe Biden
Joe Biden

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana