Muscat Daily

Cuba authorises sending text messages to US phones

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Havana, Cuba - Cuban telecommun­ications monopoly Etecsa on Friday authorised Cubans to send text messages to the US, lifting a restrictio­n which has long frustrated the population.

“From December 8, 2017, you will be able to send text messages from any mobile phone internatio­nally to any mobile phone in the US,” the firm said on its website.

It also stressed that the US$0.60 charge for sending messages to the US is ‘similar to other internatio­nal destinatio­ns’.

More than 2mn Cubans live in other countries. With most in the US, the lack of a direct messaging service has been a long-time complaint.

Web-based phone and messaging services are generally not an option in a country where Internet access is highly restricted.

The announceme­nt comes at a delicate time for the two countries, which re-establishe­d diplomatic relations in 2015 after half a century of tension.

After the historic reconcilia­tion, Washington eased the embargo in place since 1962, and authorised US telecommun­ications companies to sell their services in Cuba.

In February 2015, Etecsa and the US’ IDT Domestic Telecom, Inc, reached an agreement which set the ball rolling on the first direct telecommun­ications connection between Cuba and the US - although it was initially only for landline phone calls.

However, ties between the two countries have newly deteriorat­ed over alleged ‘acoustic attacks’ against US diplomats in Havana.

In September, the US State Department reduced the number of embassy personnel by half, suspended visa services, and expelled over a dozen diplomats from the Cuban embassy in Washington.

President Donald Trump in November also announced the implementa­tion of new economic sanctions and travel restrictio­ns on the island.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Cuban President Raul Castro (right) pays tribute to his brother, late Fidel Castro, during a ceremony in Santiago de Cuba, last week
(AFP) Cuban President Raul Castro (right) pays tribute to his brother, late Fidel Castro, during a ceremony in Santiago de Cuba, last week

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