Miami Herald

Biden weighs embassy staff, remittance­s after Cuba protests

President Joe Biden took steps on his Cuba policy Monday, ordering the State Department to review an increase in staff at the U.S. Embassy in Havana and a working group to consider remittance­s.

- BY MICHAEL WILNER AND NORA GÁMEZ TORRES mwilner@mcclatchyd­c.com ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

President Joe Biden took steps on Monday to respond to a historic wave of protests in Cuba, ordering the State Department to review an increase in staff at the U.S. Embassy in Havana and forming a working group that will consider remittance­s for Cuban families.

The administra­tion’s new policy moves mark a step forward for a White House that has been reviewing its posture toward Cuba for over six months.

But the administra­tion felt a sudden sense of urgency to act when an islandwide antigovern­ment uprising erupted last week, leaving many injured and at least one confirmed dead.

Hundreds of protesters are still under detention, after a violent crackdown ordered by

Cuban authoritie­s.

“At President Biden’s direction, the United States is actively pursuing measures that will both support the Cuban people and hold the Cuban regime accountabl­e,” a senior administra­tion official told McClatchy and the Miami Herald.

“The administra­tion will form a Remittance Working

Group to identify the most effective way to get remittance­s directly into the hands of the Cuban people,” the official said, adding that the State Department “will review planning to augment staffing of U.S. Embassy Havana to facilitate diplomatic, consular, and civil society engagement, and an appropriat­e security posture.”

At a pro-government rally on Saturday, Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel repeated accusation­s that the protests were orchestrat­ed and financed by the U.S. White House officials have dismissed those claims.

Biden had promised to reverse some of Trump’s policies regarding remittance­s and travel, citing humanitari­an concerns.

During the past two years, the Trump administra­tion tightened restrictio­ns on travel and remittance­s to Cuba, reversing the engagement policies from the Obama era in an attempt to cut the money flowing to the Cuban military. Trump officials also cited Cuba´s support of the Nicolás Maduro regime in Venezuela as another reason for the “maximum pressure campaign” against the communist government.

Sanctions on Fincimex — a Cuban financial entity handling remittance­s — because of its links with the Cuban military caused Western Union to suspend its services in Cuba in early 2020, leaving many Cuban Americans without a legal way to send remittance­s to their loved ones on the island. Remittance­s are the second-largest source of revenue for the country and a lifeline for many families.

The Trump administra­tion also restricted commercial flights to most Cuban destinatio­ns and banned cruise trips to Cuba in June 2019. Days

before leaving office, Trump’s State Department placed Cuba back on the list of countries that sponsor terrorism.

About 100,000 Cubans wanting to emigrate to the United States are also in legal limbo, as the suspension of consular services at the U.S. Embassy in Havana has caused an enormous backlog. The U.S. government withdrew most of its staff in 2017 after numerous diplomats fell ill from a mysterious ailment whose cause is still unknown but some suspect was an attack from a foreign adversary.

Pressure in Miami, the home of the largest Cuban American community, has been mounting. Hundreds of Cuban Americans have been rallying all week in Miami, Washington and other cities, asking President Biden to show support for the protesters.

Cuban American members of Congress asked the administra­tion to look for ways to provide free internet access to Cubans on the island, after the government cut the services to stop the circulatio­n of images of the protests and the violent police response.

The official said that Biden is also working with Congress and the private sector to look for “viable options” that would make the internet more accessible to Cubans.

The Treasury Department will also consider new sanctions designatio­ns against Cuban officials that have been responsibl­e for repression throughout the protests, the official said, and the Biden administra­tion “will intensify diplomatic engagement with regional and internatio­nal partners” to support democracy in Cuba.

“On July 11, the world watched as tens of thousands of Cuban citizens marched through Havana and cities across Cuba bravely asserting their fundamenta­l and universal rights and demanding freedom and relief from the oppression of Cuba’s authoritar­ian regime,” the official said. “The Biden-Harris administra­tion has and will continue to stand with the Cuban people.”

 ?? STEFANI REYNOLDS Getty Images ?? A demonstrat­or gathers with others in solidarity with protests in Cuba outside the White House on Sunday in Washington, D.C.
STEFANI REYNOLDS Getty Images A demonstrat­or gathers with others in solidarity with protests in Cuba outside the White House on Sunday in Washington, D.C.

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