San Diego Union-Tribune

HAVANA SYNDROME PAYMENTS PLANNED

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The State Department is preparing to compensate victims of mysterious brain injuries colloquial­ly known as “Havana syndrome” with sixfigure payments, according to officials and a congressio­nal aide.

Current and former State Department staff and their families who suffered from “qualifying injuries” since cases were first reported among U.S. embassy personnel in Cuba in 2016 will receive payments of between roughly $100,000 and $200,000 each, the officials and aide said.

Specific amounts will be determined by the extent and severity of the victims’ injuries, which have included brain damage not limited to vertigo, cognitive damage, and eyesight and hearing problems, according to the officials and aides.

The payments will apply only to victims employed by the State Department and their dependents. Other victims will have any compensati­on handled by the federal agency that employed them. About 20 percent of the total number of victims are or were employed by the State Department. Almost all the others were employed by the CIA or the Department of Defense, which have their own medical policies.

The officials and aide spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of the expected publicatio­n next week of the State Department’s plan to compensate victims under the terms of the HAVANA Act, which President Joe Biden signed into law last year.

That draft rule is expected to be published early next week and will not become final until after a 30-day period in which public comment will be solicited. The State Department, along with the Office of Management and Budget and the Office of Personnel Management, will consider the comments before enacting a final rule.

Despite nearly six years of investigat­ion, scientists, physicians and government officials have been unable to determine the cause of the injuries.

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