New Cuba policy will restrict travel for Americans
Five months after President
Trump announced he was tearing up President Obama's "Cuba deal," his
administration is finally implementing those changes.
Starting Thursday, U.S. tourists and companies will no longer be
able to do business with a long list of entities that allegedly have ties to
Cuban military, intelligence or security services.
American tourists will also no longer be able to travel to Cuba
on individual people-to-people exchange programs. They must travel now with a
sponsoring organization or, if there on educational travel, with an American
group or university.
The full list of 180 sanctioned Cuban businesses includes some
famous hotels in Havana like Hotel Ambos Mundos and Hotel Armadores de
Santander. The restrictions also fall on shops in Old Havana, as well as
businesses like rum producers and real estate firms.
This is also an expanded list
of Cuban government officials barred from transactions with the U.S., including
exports from American businesses.
Any contracts signed before
Thursday's implementation will be allowed to proceed, and the new travel
restrictions don't apply to anyone who booked people-to-people travel before
Trump's speech on June 16 or travel for educational or humanitarian purposes
before Nov. 9.
The new restrictions will be enforced by the Treasury
Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, with the help of
agencies like Customs and Border Patrol at ports of entry. Penalties for
breaking the sanctions include heavy fines and, after multiple violations,
prosecution.
To that end, the Treasury is asking U.S. citizens who travel to
Cuba to keep their paperwork to prove they did not violate any U.S. laws. But
the administration is not requiring that travelers obtain permission beforehand
-- a more onerous restriction from the pre-Obama era that made it more
difficult to travel.
While tourism to Cuba has never
been allowed outright, the people-to-people exchanges permitted American
travelers to see the island as part of a cultural exchange, and enforcement
under the Obama administration became very lax.
The Trump administration, however, said it wants to eliminate
any American support for the Cuban government because of its human rights
abuses. "We do not want U.S. dollars to prop up a military monopoly that
exploits and abuses the citizens of Cuba," the president said in June.
Instead, the White House is relaxing some restrictions on
exports to private Cuban businesses in order to foster greater support for the
private sector, the Treasury Department announced.
"Steer[ing] economic activities away from the Cuban
military, intelligence, and security services" and "expand[ing]
economic ties to the private small business sector in Cuba ... will encourage
the government to move toward greater political and economic freedom for the
Cuban people," a senior Treasury Department official told reporters
Wednesday.
Trump has long bashed the Obama administration's "terrible
and misguided deal with the Castro regime."
"Effective immediately, I am canceling the last
administration’s completely one-sided deal with Cuba," he said in June.
These restrictions today take
steps to bring the U.S. back to the policy before Obama opened relations with
the Caribbean island nation.
In his final days, Obama also ended the "Wet Foot, Dry
Foot" policy that allowed Cubans who arrive in America without a visa to
become permanent residents, and the Trump administration has given no indication
it will bring back the policy, which angered the Cuban government for decades.
Cuba and the U.S. still have diplomatic relations, with
embassies in each other's capitals and high-level diplomats serving there.
Those ties have been frayed, however, by the health attacks on U.S. personnel
in Havana, which led the State Department to withdraw all but emergency
personnel.
The shortages have, in turn, led to an indefinite halt on visa
services at the embassy in Havana, and the State Department issued a travel
warning for all Americans, who could also be victim to the mysterious attacks,
it said.
FROM ABCNEWS.com
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