Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cuba says U.S. forcing Western Union closures

- KIRK SEMPLE

MEXICO CITY — In the face of widening American financial restrictio­ns on Cuba, more than 400 Western Union offices on the island will close, Cuban authoritie­s said.

Fincimex, a Cuban military-controlled entity that serves as Western Union’s agent on the island, announced the planned closures Tuesday after the Trump administra­tion took steps to prohibit the transfer of money through firms associated with the country’s military.

Fincimex processes much of the remittance money, billions of dollars a year that represents a significan­t part of the Cuban economy.

Western Union said it was “exploring ways to comply with the new rules,” which take effect in late November, adding that services between the U.S. and Cuba would continue to operate for now.

Cuba’s communist government could still designate other institutio­ns with countrywid­e coverage, like banks, to channel arkansason­line. com/1030cubaca­sh/

remittance­s in compliance with the new rules, analysts said.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the restrictio­ns were imposed because the Cuban military has taken a cut of the remittance­s and “uses those funds to oppress the Cuban people and to fund Cuba’s interferen­ce in Venezuela.”

Fincimex said the new regulation­s were politicall­y motivated and would harm the Cuban people. “Doing so in the midst of a pandemic emphasizes cynicism, contempt for the Cuban people and the opportunis­m of the American government,” the firm said in a statement.

The restrictio­ns were the latest effort by the Trump administra­tion to roll back the U.S. detente with the communist nation and the policy of engagement begun by former President

Barack Obama.

But the timing, days before the U.S. presidenti­al election, is no coincidenc­e, analysts said.

The battlegrou­nd state of Florida, home to a powerful Cuban American voting bloc that has historical­ly tilted conservati­ve, was part of the Trump administra­tion’s equation, they said.

“This is simply electoral-year politics,” said Ted Henken, associate professor of sociology at Baruch College in New York. “There is a strong likelihood that the Cuban vote can play a role in keeping Florida in the Republican column this year.”

Emilio Morales, president of the Miami-based Havana Consulting Group, said the Trump administra­tion’s restrictio­ns have put the onus on the Cuban government at a time when it was already struggling to shore up an economy crippled by sanctions and the coronaviru­s pandemic. The virus has brought tourism to a grinding halt and slowed remittance­s.

Billions of dollars in remittance­s were transferre­d to

Cuba last year, Morales said, with much of the flow passing through entities controlled by the Cuban military and the rest reaching Cuba by other means such as relatives arriving by plane and people hired to carry in currency.

The arrangemen­t has been lucrative for the Cuban military, Morales said, making it extremely reluctant to give up control. But the latest restrictio­ns by the Trump administra­tion, coinciding with such a severe economic downturn on the island, may leave the government with no option but to pry the remittance­s trade out of the generals’ hands.

“If the military does not give up the remittance business to other state institutio­ns, they will run out of oxygen, it’s that simple,” Morales said.

“Obama tried to empower the Cuban people by opening remittance­s and large-scale travel,” Morales said. “However, his administra­tion unfortunat­ely did not do the due diligence on how the remittance business was channeled to the island."

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