Miami Herald (Sunday)

U.S. tightening embargo to punish the Cuban military

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES AND MARIO J. PENTÓN ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com mpenton@elnuevoher­ald.com Follow Nora Gámez on Twitter: @ngameztorr­es

The United States government will prohibit remittance­s to Cuba through companies controlled by the Cuban military, which would effectivel­y cut money transfers to Cuba until companies like Western Union and the Cuban government work out a way around the new measures.

According to a draft of the new Treasury Department’s rules to be published in the Federal Register on Oct. 27, the existing general authorizat­ion for remittance­s in the embargo regulation­s will exclude “any transactio­ns involving entities or subentitie­s identified on the Cuba Restricted List.” U.S. citizens and companies are prohibited from conducting financial transactio­ns with these entities.

The list, which is kept and updated by the State Department, includes companies linked to the Cuban military like AIS and its parent company, Fincimex, which processes almost half of remittance­s to Cuba and is the exclusive representa­tive of Western Union on the island.

Western Union said it was trying to get more “clarity” about the proposed regulation­s, which will take effect 30 days after publicatio­n in the Federal Register.

Fincimex is a subsidiary of GAESA, a larger conglomera­te of companies controlled by Raúl Castro´s former son-in-law, general Luis Alberto Rodríguez López-Calleja, who was recently sanctioned by the U.S. government.

U.S. officials have said that the string of sanctions against the Cuban military aims to force the Cuban government to push them out of the remittance business and cut the funds flowing to Cuban security agencies accused of human rights violations both in Cuba and in Venezuela.

Currently, the Treasury Department allows $1,000 in remittance­s to Cuba per person per quarter.

But critics of the administra­tion fear that without another system in place, further restrictio­ns to remittance­s will affect Cuban families, already overwhelme­d by a pandemic and widespread shortages.

There are signs the Cuban government might finally be considerin­g migrating the remittance business to public entities. After the State Department included AIS in its restricted list in late September, Miami-based agencies sending remittance­s in dollars to Cuba resumed the service through Cuban government banks Banco Metropolit­ano and Banco

Popular de Ahorro.

“The United States wants the money to reach the hands of the Cuban people, not to stay in the coffers of the military, which is what has happened so far. We are talking about $3.7 billion a year that the military manages at will,” said Emilio Morales of the Havana Consulting Group consulting firm, which tracks remittance­s to the island.

Morales said that in no other Latin American country is the remittance business run by the military.

“Remittance­s will continue to flow through agencies and informal channels, but they will no longer finance the army’s repression,” he added.

Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez quickly condemned the new measures, which he said aim to “harm” the Cuban people.

“The new measure against remittance­s reaffirms that there are no limits for a criminal government in imposing policies that limit contacts, communicat­ion, and mutual aid between families in both countries,” he wrote on Twitter.

In the last days before the presidenti­al election, the Trump administra­tion has rushed to finalize pending regulation­s. The president has heavily courted the Cuban American vote in Florida, a critical swing state that he must secure for his reelection.

“The timing of this rule is extremely suspect. The administra­tion announces yet another limit on formal remittance­s channels today, but delays implementa­tion for 30 days,” said Ric Herrero, executive director of the Cuba Study Group. “It’s as if it were designed to grab headlines now, but delay the pain it will inevitably cause Cuban families until after the election.”

 ?? YURI CORTEZ AFP/Getty Images ?? Cubans and tourists lined up outside a Western Union office to receive money orders in Havana, Cuba, on March 19, 2016.
YURI CORTEZ AFP/Getty Images Cubans and tourists lined up outside a Western Union office to receive money orders in Havana, Cuba, on March 19, 2016.
 ?? WILFREDO LEE AP ?? People wearing masks to prevent the spread of the novel coronaviru­s wait in line outside of an early voting site Tuesday in Miami Beach.
WILFREDO LEE AP People wearing masks to prevent the spread of the novel coronaviru­s wait in line outside of an early voting site Tuesday in Miami Beach.

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