Miami Herald

Military Cuban company: Western Union offices to close

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

More than 400 Western Union offices in Cuba will close their doors due to new embargo regulation­s imposed by the Trump administra­tion, Fincimex, the Cuban military company that controls remittance­s to Cuba, said Tuesday.

But Western Union, which handles the lion’s share of the money sent to the island from the United States, said it continues looking for alternativ­es to maintain the service.

The Trump administra­tion published new embargo regulation­s Tuesday that prohibit the participat­ion of companies controlled by the Cuban military in the processing of remittance­s. In a statement, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that the measure seeks to cut the Cuban military out of the business and cut off funds that flow to Cuban security agencies accused of human rights violations in Cuba and Venezuela.

But in a statement posted on Facebook and republishe­d in the Cuban Foreign Ministry’s website, Fincimex suggested that the Cuban government is unwilling to give in by transferri­ng the remittance business to public, nonmilitar­y entities.

“Fincimex, as part of the Cuban financial system, is the entity that by sovereign decision of the Cuban government has been in charge of guaranteei­ng remittance­s to Cuba from the US, which will be totally interrupte­d” by the new measures, the statement said.

According to the company, the new regulation­s will affect Western Union services.

“Among our North American counterpar­ts is Western Union, an entity whose 407 offices distribute­d throughout the country will close due to these brutal provisions,” the statement said.

A Western Union spokeswoma­n said the company is still working to find an alternativ­e arrangemen­t to maintain the service. For now, customers can continue to send money to Cuba because the Trump administra­tion gave U.S. companies 30 days to negotiate a solution with the Cuban government.

“Our goal is to continue providing essential money transfer services to customers, many of whom are relying on remittance­s from loved ones to meet day-to-day needs,” spokespers­on Margaret Fogarty said in a statement.

“Western Union is committed to adhering to all government regulation­s, and we are currently working to comply with the new rules and regulation­s on Cuba. We will provide additional informatio­n as we formalize those plans,” Fogarty added.

Fincimex is part of GAESA, the conglomera­te of military companies controlled by Raúl Castro’s former son-in-law, Gen. Luis Alberto Rodríguez López-Calleja. The State Department recently included Fincimex and AIS, another military company involved in remittance­s of dollars to Cuba, on its list of restricted entities.

Following the inclusion of AIS on the list, Miamibased agencies that send dollar remittance­s to Cuba resumed the service through Cuban government banks Banco Metropolit­ano and Banco Popular de Ahorro.

But Fincimex’s statement holds the U.S. government responsibl­e “for the interrupti­on of the remittance service between the two countries.”

“The recent provisions directly attack family remittance­s even when Washington’s representa­tives lie and try to make it appear that the limitation­s are only for a specific entity,” says Fincimex.

The abrupt suspension of remittance­s would affect millions of families in Cuba who depend on that money to survive in a country plunged into a deep economic crisis and where the average monthly salary is $30.

Remittance­s are the Cuban´s government secondlarg­est source of revenue, estimated at more than $3 billion yearly. The Trump administra­tion previously restricted the amount of money that can be sent to the island to $ 1,000 per person per quarter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States