East Bay Times

Cuba: U.S. trade embargo cost more than $5B in ’20

-

Cuba on Thursday said the decades- old U.S. trade embargo, tightened under President Donald Trump, cost it a record total of more than $5 billion over the last financial year and hurt its ability to tackle the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez made the comments at the launch of an annual campaign for a United Nations resolution condemning the embargo put in place after Cuba’s 1959 revolution.

This year’s U.N. General Assembly vote, originally set for October, was postponed to May next year due to the pandemic. It will be the 29th time Cuba has marshaled internatio­nal support against the embargo.

Damages from April 2019 through March 2020 amounted to $5.570 billion, some $1.226 billion more than in the prior year, Rodriguez said, bringing the total cost to $144 billion since the embargo’s inception He added that sanctions had also made it hard to acquire necessary personal protective equipment and ventilator­s to fight coronaviru­s while U.S. policy had separated families.

“Whoever wins the U.S. elections will have to face the tangible reality that the blockade ... hurts the Cuban people, families, Cubans who live abroad (and) violates human rights,” Rodriguez told a news conference in Havana.

The Trump administra­tion has backtracke­d on nearly all the measures his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, had taken to ease the embargo and improve ties between the United States and its old Cold War foe.

It has even imposed sanctions, partly in a bid to lock in the Cuban-American vote in hotly contested Florida in the Nov. 3 U. S. presidenti­al election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States