Miami Herald

U.S. travelers will not be able to stay in Cuban regime hotels

■ The United States government will restrict imports of rum and tobacco from Cuba, as well as lodging in government hotels, among other sanctions.

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

Americans traveling to Cuba will not be able to buy rum or tobacco as souvenirs, nor will they be able to stay in government hotels, according to new restrictio­ns announced by President Donald Trump on Wednesday.

“Today, as part of our continuing fight against communist oppression, I am announcing that the Treasury Department will prohibit U.S. travelers from staying at properties owned by the Cuban government,” Trump said in a speech to honor Bay of Pigs veterans at the White House. “We are also further restrictin­g the importatio­n of Cuban alcohol and Cuban tobacco. These actions will ensure U.S. dollars do not fund the Cuban regime.”

The Treasury Department modified the embargo regulation­s on Cuba to prohibit imports of rum and tobacco, as well as lodging in hotels or properties controlled by the Cuban government, government officials and the Communist Party, or their close relatives.

The properties appear in a new list created by the Department of State. Travel and tourism companies subject to U.S. jurisdicti­on will not be able to make reservatio­ns at these properties.

The list names 433 hotels and properties, including some “casas particular­es” (private rentals) that the State Department determined were not independen­t of the government, said Carrie Filipetti, deputy assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, in a call with reporters on Wednesday.

Among the private rentals included is Casa Vida Luxury Holidays, a property advertised on Airbnb that, according to media reports, is linked to Vilma Rodríguez, granddaugh­ter of Communist Party head and former President Raúl Castro.

The measures will deal a harsh blow to Cuba’s tourism industry because the government owns all the island’s hotels. Many travel companies have operations in the United States and will therefore be affected by the measure. Previously, the administra­tion had banned accommodat­ion in hotels run by military companies, but now the prohibitio­n extends to all state-run properties.

Thousands of Cuban Americans who travel to the island every year usually take their families on vacation at these hotels.

“The prohibitio­n on the use of hotels owned by the government of Cuba will also result in fewer airline flights from the United States to Cuba,” said John Kavulich, the president of the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council.

Filipetti said the restrictio­ns aim at denying funds to the government, which dominates the hospitalit­y industry as well as tobacco and rum production. She added that the policy intends to benefit owners of private bed and breakfasts.

“The Cuban government profits from properties in the hospitalit­y industry owned or controlled by the Cuban government ... all at the expense of the Cuban people, who continue to face repression at the hands of the regime,” said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a statement. “Authorized travelers should instead stay in private accommodat­ions, or casas particular­es, owned and operated by legitimate­ly independen­t entreprene­urs.”

The Treasury Department also eliminated a general authorizat­ion policy for the participat­ion or organizati­on of conference­s, seminars, exhibition­s and sporting events. Citizens, residents and companies subject to U.S. law must apply for a specific authorizat­ion or license for these activities.

Organizati­ons in favor of more engagement with Cuba quickly pointed out that further restrictin­g travel to Cuba could also hurt the private sector the administra­tion officials say the U.S. wants to lift up.

“To continue limiting American citizens to travel to Cuba is to continue to put pressure on Cuba’s growing private sector, which is already hurting from the domestic economic crisis, the impact of U.S. policies, and the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic,” said María

José Espinosa, interim president of Engage Cuba.

The new rules will go into effect Thursday, when they will be officially published in the Federal Register.

MORE SANCTIONS TO CUBA

Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel blasted on Twitter the U.S. “empire” and the new measures “that violate the rights of Cubans and Americans. Its cruel and criminal policy will be defeated by our people, who will never renounce their sovereignt­y.”

In the last two years, the administra­tion has intensifie­d its “maximum pressure” campaign against the Cuban government, citing human rights violations and its support of Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela.

In June, the Trump administra­tion included Fincimex, a company controlled by the military conglomera­te GAESA, on a list of entities linked to the Cuban military. Persons subject to U.S. jurisdicti­on are prohibited from direct financial transactio­ns with these entities.

The United States also suspended all charter and commercial flights to Cuba, except for flights to Havana. It also limited per person remittance­s to $1,000 per quarter. And it has sanctioned companies involved in the shipments of Venezuelan oil to Cuba.

U.S. sanctions, the coronaviru­s pandemic, and the decline in Venezuela’s oil aid have plunged Cuba’s inefficien­t socialist economy into a deep crisis. The population suffers from a severe shortage of food, medicine and hygiene products, and although the government has promised some economic reforms, none appear to be immediate.

On Tuesday, Díaz-Canel complained to the United Nations General Assembly about the increase in the

“aggressive­ness of the U.S. blockade . ... Not a week goes by without that government issuing statements against Cuba or imposing new restrictio­ns.”

U.S. officials have rejected the Cuban government’s narrative and have pushed back on criticism that the sanctions may aggravate the situation of ordinary Cubans.

What the Cuban people are “going through, it’s a serious humanitari­an concern. The embargo has specific provisions to allow Cuba to import food from the United States; it has exceptions for food and medical supplies,” said Mara Tekach, coordinato­r for Cuban affairs at the State Department in an interview with the Miami Herald on Wednesday. Citing Cuba’s long-standing inability to feed its population, Tekach added that “the regime is the one that ultimately is failing its people.“

The sanctions and the unrelentin­g attacks on socialism have secured President Trump the support of a significan­t portion of Cuban-American voters.

“The Obama-Biden administra­tion made a weak, pathetic, one-sided deal with the Castro dictatorsh­ip that betrayed the Cuban people and enriched the communist regime,” Trump said in the White House speech. “Today, we reaffirm our ironclad solidarity with the Cuban people, and our eternal conviction that freedom will prevail over the sinister forces of communism.”

Filipetti denied that the timing of the announceme­nt was linked to the upcoming presidenti­al election, as critics of the administra­tion have suggested.

“This announceme­nt, just weeks before the presidenti­al election, shows what the Trump Administra­tion’s Cuba policy is really about,” said Collin Laverty, president of Cuba Educationa­l Travel. “It’s about South Florida and it places absolutely no importance on the well-being of the Cuban people, democracy, human rights or advancing U.S. national interests in the region.”

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 ?? ISMAEL FRANCISCO AP, file 2020 ?? The iconic Hotel Nacional in Havana.
ISMAEL FRANCISCO AP, file 2020 The iconic Hotel Nacional in Havana.

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