Los Angeles Times

U.S. sets new Cuba sanctions

Biden administra­tion tries to pressure the communist leadership after mass protests.

- By Aamer Madhani and E. Eduardo Castillo Madhani and Castillo write for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion announced new sanctions on Friday against Cuba’s national revolution­ary police and its top two officials as the U.S. looks to increase pressure on the communist government following this month’s protests on the island.

The Police Nacional Revolciona­ria and the agency’s director and deputy director, Oscar Callejas Valcarce and Eddie Sierra Arias, were targeted in the latest sanctions announced by the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. The police are part of Cuba’s Interior Ministry, which was already the subject of a blanket designatio­n by the Trump administra­tion back in January.

“We hear the cries of freedom coming from the island. The United States is taking concerted action to bolster the cause of the Cuban people,” President Biden said at the start of a White House meeting with Cuban Americans not long after the Treasury Department announced the sanctions.

The administra­tion says it is considerin­g a wide range of additional options in response to the protest crackdown, including providing internet access to Cubans, and has created a working group to review U.S. remittance policy to ensure that more of the money that Cuban Americans send home makes it directly into the hands of their families without the government taking a cut. Biden added that more sanctions were in the offing.

The White House meeting comes almost three weeks after unusual July 11 protests in which thousands of Cubans took to the streets in Havana and other cities to protest shortages, power outages and government policies. They were the first such protests since the 1990s.

The Cuban government deployed the national police to attack protesters, the U.S. Treasury Department said in a statement. The police were photograph­ed confrontin­g and arresting protesters in Havana, including members of the Movement of July 11 Mothers, a group founded to organize families of the imprisoned and disappeare­d, the department said.

In Camaguey, a Catholic priest was beaten and arrested by the police while he was defending young protesters, according to Treasury officials. Officers also beat a group of peaceful demonstrat­ors, including several minors, and there have also been documented instances in which the police used clubs to break up peaceful protests across Cuba, Treasury officials said.

“The Treasury Department will continue to designate and call out by name those who facilitate the Cuban regime’s involvemen­t in serious human rights abuse,” said Andrea Gacki, director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control. “Today’s action serves to further hold accountabl­e those responsibl­e for suppressin­g the Cuban people’s calls for freedom and respect for human rights.”

Among the Cuban American activists meeting with Biden was Yotuel Romero, coauthor of the song “Patria y vida!” which has become a kind of anthem for the protests, an official said.

Others present included L. Felice Gorordo, chief executive of the company EMerge Americas; Ana Sofía Peláez, founder of the Miami Freedom Project, and Miami’s former mayor, Manny Díaz, and Sen. Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The White House said Biden would discuss the new sanctions and ways to potentiall­y establish internet access for the Cuban people.

Internet access is a sensitive issue in Cuba. In the days before the recent protests, there were calls on social media for anti-government demonstrat­ions. Cuba’s government said anti-Castro groups in the U.S. have used social media, particular­ly Twitter, to campaign against it and blamed Twitter for doing nothing to stop it.

Internet service was cut off at one point during the July 11 protest, though Cuban authoritie­s have not explicitly acknowledg­ed that they did it.

Some U.S. leaders, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, have said the White House should do something to maintain internet service in Cuba.

The Biden administra­tion is also considerin­g proposals put forward by U.S. advocates of trade with Cuba that would restore ways for Cuban Americans to send money to relatives on the island.

Biden and others have rejected the outright restoratio­n of remittance­s because of a percentage fee of the transactio­n paid to the government. But under one proposal, the transfer agents would waive that fee until the end of the year, according to proponents.

The proposal would have to be cleared by the Cuban government, however, and it is not at all clear it would agree.

Last week, the U.S. government announced sanctions against the minister of the Cuban armed forces, Álvaro López Miera, and the Special Brigade of the Ministry of the Interior — known as the “black berets” — for having participat­ed in the arrest of protesters.

Internatio­nal organizati­ons have harshly criticized the Cuban government, which has said that although people affected by the country’s crisis participat­ed in the protests, there were also “criminals” who took advantage of the situation to create disturbanc­es. At times, the protests turned into vandalism with looting, robbery and confrontat­ions with the police.

 ?? Ramon Espinosa Associated Press ?? POLICE ARREST an anti-government protester in Havana on July 11, one of thousands to demonstrat­e.
Ramon Espinosa Associated Press POLICE ARREST an anti-government protester in Havana on July 11, one of thousands to demonstrat­e.

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