Miami Herald

‘Cybersecur­ity accident’ in Cuba halts money transfers from family and friends abroad

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

Western Union remittance services to Cuba, used by many Miamians to send money to relatives on the island, have been halted since Jan. 28, a few days before the Cuban government said a “cybersecur­ity incident” had affected the country’s “electronic payment systems.”

Miami Herald readers reported they haven’t been able to send money to relatives and friends on the island through Western

Union. The company had not disclosed the service disruption until the Herald asked Thursday. Messages on the company’s website and app report technical errors when users try to send money to Cuba.

“Western Union is, unfortunat­ely, experienci­ng technical difficulti­es on the processing side (Cuba side) of our operations that have caused a temporary suspension of services between the US and Cuba only,” said Bradley Jones, the company’s spokespers­on.

Jones said Western Union “is currently working with Orbit SA, its processing partner on the island, to resume services between the two countries as quickly as possible.”

He said the company has reached out to customers whose transactio­ns were affected. “Customers that have not heard from a Western Union representa­tive or with questions can call 1-800-325-6000,” he said.

On Feb. 1st, Mildrey Granadillo, a Cuban vice minister of economy and planning, said on state television that the government was investigat­ing a “cybersecur­ity incident” linked to a virus that was coming “from abroad” and has affected electronic systems used to sell gasoline on the island. The official cited the attack as a reason to postpone a highly unpopular price hike that would have increased the price of gas fivefold.

But the halt on the processing of remittance­s suggests the effects of the cyber attack might been broader than publicly announced.

A representa­tive of Miami-based travel and remittance­s agency VaCuba also said the agency has not been able to process money transfers to Cuba “because of problems with the Cuban banks.” The person said Cuban officials have said the operations might resume soon.

VaCuba also has an agreement with Orbit SA to send money to the island.

An Orbit SA employee in Cuba answered the phone but said she was not authorized to provide informatio­n about when the services might resume nor the technical difficulti­es affecting the service.

“That informatio­n you’re asking is the same informatio­n Western Union already has,” she said.

Orbit SA, created in February 2022, is the only entity authorized by the Cuban government to process remittance­s.

In June 2020, the Trump administra­tion sanctioned Fincimex, a company that is owned by Cuba’s military and handled money transfers from the United States. Later that year, the Trump administra­tion banned U.S. companies from using Fincimex for money transfers, causing the suspension of services by Western Union and VaCuba.

After negotiatio­ns, the Cuban government agreed to create Orbit SA to handle money transfers. Though the entity is not officially tied to the Cuban military, Proyecto Inventario, an independen­t Cuba

Former diplomat appears in Miami court to plead not guilty to being agent for Cuba, news outlet, has reported that Orbit’s office in Miramar, an upscale neighborho­od in Havana, is next to a Fincimex office and that former Fincimex staffers work for Orbit.

In November 2022, the U.S. Treasury Department authorized VaCuba to use Orbit SA for remittance­s. Shortly after, Western Union launched a pilot program to resume money transfers to the island. The service was extended to thousands of branches in the United States in March 2023.

Customers in the U.S. using Western Union and VaCuba can send dollars to Cubans who have cards issued by three Cuban banks: Banco Popular de Ahorro, Banco Metropolit­ano S.A. and Banco de Credito y Comercio.

Initially, Western Union said the money was going to be paid out to clients in dollars. But that’s not what happened. Instead, clients in Cuba receive the money in a virtual currency known as MLC. And Cuban banks, which do not have enough foreign currency, do not allow account holders to access their deposits in dollars.

“Western Union follows the regulation­s set forth by the Central Bank of Cuba that state cross-border transactio­ns are received in digital MLC,” Jones said. “Customers wishing to receive the remittance in U.S. dollars may visit their bank and request that the remittance be converted to U.S. dollars; however, this is at the discretion and availabili­ty of U.S. currency at that particular bank.”

Because people in Cuba cannot get money from banks in dollars, many Cubans abroad send money to their relatives using informal channels, usually people who are known as mulas and travel to the island carrying the money.

Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

 ?? ERNESTO MASTRASCUS­A EFE/Sipa USA | Nov. 23 2020 ?? Two classic cars pass in front of a Western Union office in Havana. Western Union remittance services to Cuba, used by many Miamians to send money to relatives on the island, have been halted since Jan. 28.
ERNESTO MASTRASCUS­A EFE/Sipa USA | Nov. 23 2020 Two classic cars pass in front of a Western Union office in Havana. Western Union remittance services to Cuba, used by many Miamians to send money to relatives on the island, have been halted since Jan. 28.

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