Muscat Daily

US easing visa restrictio­ns for Cuba

The US is also easing restrictio­ns on sending family remittance­s between the two countries

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Washington, US - The United States said on Monday it is easing restrictio­ns imposed during former president Donald Trump’s administra­tion on travel to Cuba and on the sending of family remittance­s between the United States and the communist island.

“The Cuban people are confrontin­g an unpreceden­ted humanitari­an crisis and our policy will continue to focus on empowering the Cuban people to help them create a future free from repression and economic suffering,” the State Department said.

The loosening of the embargo on Cuba will see increased visa processing, including at the Havana consulate, but with most visas still handled at the US embassy in Guyana.

The statement said it will ‘facilitate educationa­l connection­s’ between the two countries, as well as support for profession­al research including ‘support for expanded internet access and re

This file photo shows people queuing at the US embassy in Havana, as the consulate resumed issuing some immigrant visa services which have been suspended since 2017 on May 3

mittance process companies’.

To boost the flow of remittance­s, the US government will lift the current limit of US$1,000 per quarter for each sender, and also allow non-family remittance­s to ‘support independen­t Cuban entreprene­urs’.

It said it would increase the number of flights permitted between the US and the Caribbean island, and serving cities other than the capital Havana. It will

also allow certain group visits, which are currently forbidden.

Cuba’s foreign minister, Bruno Rodriguez, tweeted that the move was ‘a small step in the right direction’, but emphasised that it does ‘not modify the embargo’ in place since 1962.

“Neither the objectives nor the main instrument­s of the United States’ policy against Cuba, which is a failure, are changing,” he wrote.

US Senator Bob Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a member of President Joe Biden’s Democratic Party, denounced the lifting of some restrictio­ns, saying that the Cuban regime ‘continues its ruthless persecutio­n of countless Cubans from all walks of life’ following unpreceden­ted street protests last year.

The easing of travel

‘risks

sending the wrong message to the wrong people, at the wrong time and for all the wrong reasons’, he said in a statement. “Those who still believe that increasing travel will breed democracy in Cuba are simply in a state of denial. For decades, the world has been traveling to Cuba and nothing has changed.”

Republican Senator Marco Rubio, who is of Cuban heritage, also slammed the announce

ment, saying on Twitter that the Cuban regime ‘threatened Biden with mass migration and have sympathise­rs inside the administra­tion’.

He said ‘the result is today we see the first steps back to the failed Obama policy on Cuba’, referring to former president Barack Obama’s thaw in relations with Havana, including a visit there in 2016.

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(aFP)

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