Miami Herald

Trump sanctions Cuba’s interior minister and security agency, ramping up pressure

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com Follow Nora Gámez Torres on Twitter: @ngameztorr­es Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

The Trump administra­tion sanctioned Cuba’s interior minister and the agency overseeing the island’s state security appamaking ratus Friday in a final push to punish the island’s government before leaving office.

The U.S. Treasury Department accused Brigadier General Lázaro Alberto Álvarez Casas of “serious human rights abuses” in the designatio­n. Also sanctioned is the Ministry of the Interior, which oversees the prison system, police and state security agency.

“The Cuban regime has a long history of human rights abuse,” Treasury

Secretary Steven Mnuchin said. “The United States will continue to use all the tools at its disposal to address the dire human rights in Cuba and elsewhere around the world.”

The new sanctions come after four years of Trump administra­tion policies steadily escalating pressure on the island, which the outgoing president sees as a “malignant actor” in the region. In the final days of his administra­tion, he is ramping up the pressure on the island. Earlier this week, he added Cuba to the state sponsors of terrorism list, a move seen as politicize­d by his critics.

The measures could pose an extra hurdle for President-elect Joe Biden, who is expected to take a different course on Cuba.

In a statement on Friday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the Interior Ministry, known by its Spanish acronym, MININT, and its state security agents monitor and arrest the Cuban government’s critics. Pompeo mentioned the case of José Daniel Ferrer, a well-known Cuban dissident who was arrested in 2019 and kept in a MININT prison where he suffered abuse and did not receive medical attention, the statement said.

“Today, the Cuban regime holds more than 100 political prisoners and Ministry officials have overseen the torture of many of those detainees,” Pompeo said.

The Treasury Department sanction freezes any U.S. assets. The list includes individual­s and companies sanctioned for drug traffickin­g, terrorism, human rights violations, and other crimes. Companies or individual­s under U.S. jurisdicti­on cannot engage in transactio­ns with those blackliste­d.

In addition to the Treasury Department sanction, the U.S. government also castigated the Cuban minister under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountabi­lity Act, which carries similar implicatio­ns.

Pompeo accused Álvarez Casas of being “an accomplice in harassing and monitoring journalist­s, dissidents, activists, and members of civil society groups, including more recently members of the San Isidro Movement.”

Álvarez Casas replaced Julio César Gandarilla Bermejo as the head of MININT after his death in November. Previously, he was the agency’s deputy minister. The State Department prohibited Gandarilla Bermejo from entering the United States in November 2019, due to his role in ongoing repression in Venezuela and Cuba.

The new sanctions could hamper future cooperatio­n between U.S. federal agencies and MININT, which also includes a Cuban

Coast Guard branch. In 2016, during a brief thaw in relations under then-President Barack Obama, a MININT delegation visited U.S. military installati­ons in Key West.

On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Commerce also declared Cuba — and other countries like Venezuela, China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea — as “foreign adversarie­s” as part of a Trump executive order “securing the informatio­n and communicat­ions technology and services.”

The order allows the Commerce Department to prohibit transactio­ns. It is not clear how the rule — which does not go into effect for another six months and is subject to public comment — might affect Cubans until all the details are released. But experts believe it could affect private Cuban programmer­s who outsource their services to companies in Miami.

 ?? Cubadebate ?? The U.S. Treasury Department accused Brigadier General Lázaro Alberto Álvarez Casas of ‘serious human rights abuses.’ He is Cuba’s interior minister.
Cubadebate The U.S. Treasury Department accused Brigadier General Lázaro Alberto Álvarez Casas of ‘serious human rights abuses.’ He is Cuba’s interior minister.

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