Imperial Valley Press

Cuba says Obama’s easing of embargo hasn’t helped economy

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HAVANA (AP) — President Barack Obama’s easing of the U.S. trade embargo on Cuba has had virtually no positive effect on the island’s economy, Cuba’s top diplomat asserted Friday.

Presenting Cuba’s annual report ahead of a U.N. vote on condemning the embargo, Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez said the sanctions cost his country $4.6 billion last year.

The total cost of the 55-year-old embargo now stands at $125.9 billion, he added.

The presentati­on of Cuba’s update on the embargo is an annual ritual driving home to a mostly domestic audience Havana’s message that U.S. sanctions are to blame for most of the country’s problems.

The report contains a detailed accounting of both specific damage from the embargo, such as U.S. government fines on Cuba’s business partners, and scenarios in which Cuba faults the U.S. for the loss of hypothetic­al business.

For example the report estimates that Cuba could sell 2.5 million cases of Havana Club rum in the United States each year and factors in that theoretica­l lost revenue, $105 million, to the total damages in the report.

Rodriguez praised Obama for allowing easier U.S. travel to Cuba, permitting commercial flights and attempting to ease financial transactio­ns with Cuba, among other measures.

However, he said, “there’s been no fundamenta­l change in the applicatio­n of the blockade, and because of that, I can say, there hasn’t been a greater economic impact of the executive actions until now and there won’t be until we see bigger steps.”

Rodriguez acknowledg­ed the problems of Cuba’s centrally controlled economy, which is struggling to increase productivi­ty in the face of an outdated and inefficien­t bureaucrac­y and low state salaries that lead many employees to steal from their workplaces or accept small bribes in order to get by.

“No one’s ignoring or aims to hide our problems, our limitation­s, our mistakes,” he said. “But neither can we diminish the impact of the blockade.”

The United Nations votes next month on an annual resolution on condemning the embargo that usually passes with overwhelmi­ng support.

Last year the United States considered abstaining for the first time, before voting against it.

As reporters were leaving Rodriguez’s press conference at the Cuban Foreign Ministry, U.S. Charge d’Affaires Jeffrey DeLaurenti­s’ car was seen dropping him off. U.S. and Cuban diplomats have begun meeting frequently on a wide array of topics since the declaratio­n of detente on Dec. 17, 2014.

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