Jamaica Gleaner

Biden could relax US sanctions on Cuba

- Paul Clarke/Gleaner Writer paul.clarke@gleanerjm.com

WITH UNITED States President-elect Joe Biden planning to sign a flurry of executive orders after being sworn into office on January 20 next year to reverse a number of Trump policies, Cuba could once again see a warming of relations with its northern neighbour in the months ahead.

Ambassador Curtis Ward believes a relaxing of sanctions in a Joe Biden-Kamala Harris administra­tion is possible for the Caribbean island, returning to pre-Donald Trump times under more favourable policies under the Barack Obama era, during which Biden served as vice-president.

“From 2009 onwards until he left office, President Obama continued to gradually decrease restrictio­ns on Cuba, allowed people to travel to Cuba on airlines, money transfer business, travel agents booked people for Cuba, and actually the rapprochem­ent with Cuba ended with embassies being opened in Havana and Washington, DC,”Ward, Jamaica’s former deputy permanent representa­tive to the United Nations, told a Gleaner Editors’ Forum yesterday.

“President Trump came into office and started to reverse those policies by returning restrictio­ns that preceded Obama and by his action to appease a certain segment of the society in Florida – the Cuban-American population – to reverse most of Obama’s policies,” he added.

Ward noted that some of the policies could be reinstitut­ed through executive orders by Biden, but tougher sanctions such as the Cuban embargo can only be shaken if the Democrats, who already have their grasp on the presidency and the House, also gain control of the Senate, which hinges on the outcome of a run-off in Georgia.

Ward said that a Republican-controlled Senate is unlikely to countenanc­e any lifting of the embargo, which prevents American businesses, and businesses with commercial activities in the United States, from conducting trade with Cuban interests.

“I think there will be in some way a more sane policy on Cuba,”Ward said, however.

Lastweek,Cuban President Miguel Daiz-Canel Bermudez tweeted that he had recognised that the Americans had chosen a new direction in the presidenti­al election and that he believed in the possibilit­y of having constructi­ve bilateral relations with the US while “respecting our difference­s”.

In June, Republican Senator Rick Scott led the introducti­on of the Cut Profits to the Cuban Regime Act in the US Senate to classify the humanitari­an engagement­s by Cuba as a form of human traffickin­g and has the potential to be a factor when ranking countries in its annual Traffickin­g in Persons report.

EASIER PATH

Scherie Murray, a Republican supporter and head of the Unite the Fight Political Action Committee, agreed that if Republican­s do not win the Senate this time around, Biden would have an easier path to easing restrictio­ns on Cuba.

She said also that if Georgia Republican­s pull off a win, then there will be gridlock in the Senate, testing Biden’s talks of unity and Democrats will be forced to work across the aisles.

“That is something that I support,” she told the forum.

In September, President Trump announced a series of new sanctions against Cuba that prohibit Americans from importing Cuban cigars and rum and staying in hotels funded by the Cuban government.

The new restrictio­ns follow a series of measures announced by the Trump administra­tion in 2019 that aimed to curtail travel to Cuba from the United States, including a ban on cruise ships, private yachts, fishing vessels, and group educationa­l and cultural trips.

The Treasury Department said that US citizens will also have been restricted from attending or organising conference­s in Cuba and participat­ing in public performanc­es, clinics, workshops, competitio­ns, and exhibition­s on the island.

 ?? AP ?? A cyclist wearing a mask as a precaution against the spread of the coronaviru­s carries a chicken in his hand while he pedals his bicycle in Havana, Cuba, on October 11, 2020. There are hopes for a warming of relations between Cuba and the United States as Joe Biden takes the presidency next year.
AP A cyclist wearing a mask as a precaution against the spread of the coronaviru­s carries a chicken in his hand while he pedals his bicycle in Havana, Cuba, on October 11, 2020. There are hopes for a warming of relations between Cuba and the United States as Joe Biden takes the presidency next year.

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