Los Angeles Times

Obama makes travel to Cuba easier and lif ts f inancial curbs on Havana.

U. S. eases way for Americans to go on their own; financial curbs on Havana also lifted

- By Christi Parsons and Tracy Wilkinson christi.parsons@latimes.com tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — The White House moved Tuesday to ease major restrictio­ns on Americans traveling to Cuba and on Cuba’s use of U. S. dollars for internatio­nal transactio­ns, announcing the shift as President Obama prepares to make a historic trip to Havana next week.

The new rules mean Americans will be allowed to visit Cuba on their own, instead of on expensive group tours, as long as they declare that the trip is to learn about Cuban people and culture.

Although tourism is still officially barred under the U. S. trade embargo, travel will be permitted for almost any cultural activity, including musical performanc­es, art appreciati­on and baseball games. Tourists may be able to declare their plans while booking on a travel website.

The Obama administra­tion has steadily loosened bans on trade and travel to Cuba over the last year as part of a push to normalize relations with the former Cold War adversary before the president leaves office.

The latest decision, issued under Obama’s executive authority, perhaps is the most significan­t for Americans seeking to visit the island nation and for U. S. airlines, hotels and financial institutio­ns seeking to operate there.

Havana and Washington in August restored diplomatic relations that had been broken for more than half a century. White House officials said Tuesday that broadening personal and commercial ties will help bridge the people- to- people gap that remains.

Those relationsh­ips will do more for Cuban liberty than any official U. S. action, said Ben Rhodes, the Obama deputy national security advisor who has helped broker the detente with Havana.

“This is in America’s national interest,” Rhodes said, “and represents the best way for us to improve opportunit­ies for the Cuban people.”

The changes were announced f ive days before Obama becomes the f irst sitting U. S. president to set foot in Cuba since Calvin Coolidge in 1928. Obama is expected to meet President Raul Castro, but not former President Fidel Castro.

Obama’s March 20- 22 visit remains controvers­ial because of concerns about communist- run Cuba’s human rights abuses and its state- run economy. Congress has maintained a trade embargo on Cuba, and some lawmakers staunchly oppose the thaw.

But some U. S. business interests, including banks and profession­al baseball, have welcomed the easing of restrictio­ns.

The new rules will allow Cubans to open U. S. bank accounts and allow Cubans living in the United States to earn a salary or compensati­on.

Major League Baseball is in talks with the Cuban government to let players sign directly with its teams, rather than f lee Cuba and seek political asylum in the United States.

The league still hasn’t resolved difference­s with Cuban authoritie­s, however, including how many players can be drafted for U. S. teams and whether they also can compete in the Cuban summer leagues, according to American officials familiar with the talks.

Obama’s critics see the latest easing of restrictio­ns as further concession­s to an abusive government, not help for the Cuban people.

“These unilateral actions will further prop up a communist regime in Cuba that has a long record of brutal human rights abuse,” Rep. Ed Royce ( R- Fullerton), chairman of the House For- eign Affairs Committee, said in a statement.

“While the Castros and their agents are given access to the U. S. f inancial system, the suffering Cuban people will still get paid in funny money — if at all. Workers at foreign- owned resorts receive only a fraction of their salary, sometimes as little as f ive percent. The government pockets the rest.”

Advocates of normalizin­g U. S. ties to Cuba welcome the changes.

“This is what historic change looks like,” said James Williams, president of Engage Cuba, an umbrella public policy organizati­on. “The new regulation­s will speed up a process that is now all but inevitable. It will lift important obstacles to the full normalizat­ion of relations.”

The bar on Cuba using U. S. dollars in internatio­nal transactio­ns was one of Havana’s chief gripes. Cuban authoritie­s contended that the prohibitio­n was incongruen­t with normal relations.

Cuba has dollars because of remittance­s from workers and families overseas and spending by foreign tourists.

The government is forced to exchange dollars for euros or other currencies on the internatio­nal market, a step that made trade more costly. The new rules open internatio­nal banking to Cuba and to commerce with dollars.

Until now, it was illegal to pay a Cuban citizen working in the U. S. more than his or her living costs. University professors who taught here, musicians who toured here, even athletes playing for U. S. teams could not receive fair wages unless they defected. They now will receive a normal salary.

The shift in travel is perhaps the most dramatic. American travelers to Cuba still must be able to present U. S. border agents with an itinerary showing educationa­l or other approved pursuits, but most experts don’t expect U. S. authoritie­s to enforce the remaining restrictio­n.

“They’ve essentiall­y deregulate­d travel,” said Robert Muse, a Washington attorney who specialize­s in U. S. laws regarding Cuba. “This is a standing invitation to travel to Cuba for U. S. tourists.”

 ?? Photog r aphs by Brian van der Brug
Los Angeles Times ?? AMERICANS can visit Cuba as long as they declare they plan to learn about the people and culture. Above, Havana’s Plaza Vieja last year.
Photog r aphs by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times AMERICANS can visit Cuba as long as they declare they plan to learn about the people and culture. Above, Havana’s Plaza Vieja last year.
 ??  ?? A PRODUCE VENDOR in Old Havana. New rules allow Cubans living in the U. S. to earn a salary and may help Major League Baseball recruit players.
A PRODUCE VENDOR in Old Havana. New rules allow Cubans living in the U. S. to earn a salary and may help Major League Baseball recruit players.

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