National Office
3628 12th Street NE
1st Floor
Washington, DC
20017
202.547.6112
202.536.4708 fax
US Cuba Policy - Enough is Enough!
May 5,
2006
Friends,
A year ago, after having brought over 1,150
delegates to Cuba, the U.S. Treasury Department
refused to renew WfP's license to legally bring
delegations to the island.
In the last year, the Treasury Department has
continued to phase out exchanges between the Cuban
and United States people. Worse yet, the Bush
Administration's so-called "Commission for
Assistance to a Free Cuba" is expected release a
report in the next month that will further tighten
the embargo and take away our freedom to travel.
Enough is enough! Now is the time to take action!
Below is an action alert from our partners at LAWG.
Call the White House and Congress and make your
voice heard!
Just when you thought it couldn’t get worse, it
does. That is how we are feeling about a series of
new, restrictive actions taken by the U.S.
government regarding citizen rights to travel to
Cuba and to exchange with Cubans. There are so many
new examples that we are going to have to resort to
a list. So . . . here it goes.
Incoming visa denials for academics continue.
Most recently seven Cubans were denied visas by the
U.S. Department of State to attend the annual
Society of American Archaeology’s conference in
Puerto Rico. See our website homepage
http://www.lawg.org
for more information and action
you could take.
It’s Just the Kids (IJTK), the humanitarian
organization which we have recommended to you,
recently had its two-year travel license severely
amended by OFAC. IJTK had planned to bring U.S.
volunteers to Havana in June to build three
playgrounds, with the approval of both the U.S. and
the Cuban governments. The amended travel license,
which essentially revoked their original license,
expired on April 30, 2006, preventing the June
project from proceeding as planned. Bill Hauf, the
founder of IJTK, reports that they are working to
have the terms of the original license reinstated.
For more details, see their website at
http://www.itsjustthekids.org/cubasite.htm,
and stay
tuned.
The Department of Treasury has denied travel
licenses for U.S. music groups to present public
concerts in Cuba, saying that they would no longer
approve public performances as a matter of policy
and that they will be eliminating “public
performance” as an authorized category for travel to
Cuba.
Six religious travel licenses have been
suspended over the past several weeks, in an
apparent “crackdown” on travel by Cuban Americans
visiting relatives under these religious licenses.
OFAC won’t provide the names of the religious
organizations. (El Nuevo Herald reports that some
100,000 people have traveled to Cuba for “religious
motives” in the last two years since the new
restrictions on Cuban-American family travel.)
Approximately 16 travel agencies in the Miami
area which had been licensed to arrange travel to
Cuba lost authorization to do so, effective
immediately, in the past month. Four agencies were
suspended, as reported by El Nuevo Herald, for
“flagrant violations of the established requirements
of their licenses.” They are: Estrella de Cuba, Baby
Envios Travel, Fortuna Travel Services, and Cubatur
Express. If people traveling under the suspended
licenses were currently in Cuba, the charter
carriers were told they were not allowed to pick up
the travelers without sending their names and date
of return to OFAC; the carriers would then receive
special permission from OFAC to pick up the
passengers. Those with up-coming travel plans were
informed that their air tickets were canceled.
El Nuevo Herald also reports that federal
authorities plan to audit in the next years all of
the approximately 250 agencies with authorization to
operate travel services to Cuba from the United
States.
A 50-page “Circular 2006” was issued about a
month ago to all travel service providers (TSPs)
outlining additional reporting and screening
procedures which must be implemented immediately,
particularly regarding Cuban-American travel and
travel under the General License for research. The
General License for research is still allowable, but
researchers must now supply their resume in advance.
Included in these new guidelines: TSPs can no longer
hold other specific travel licenses.
In 2005, OFAC collected—by their own
account—$1.5 million in fines for allegedly
traveling without a license and issued a big
increase in the number of “requirements to furnish
information” (RFIs) sent out. The RFIs include 200
letters sent to Pastors and Peace and the Venceremos
Brigade within a two-month period of time in
response to their trips last summer.
Marazul Charters estimates (unofficial) that
travel under the academic specific license is down
90 percent.
We are certain that this list is not exhaustive.
If you know of further recent examples of license
denials, withdrawals or suspensions, or visa denials
for Cubans to travel to the United States for
legitimate reasons, or other actions that separate
our two peoples, please let us know. Send your input
to lawg@lawg.org.
We also realize that this trend is not new, but
the escalation of restrictive measures is truly
alarming. With the imminent approach of the release
of new recommendations from the Bush
Administration’s so-called “Commission for
Assistance to a Free Cuba,” we hate to think what
further measures may be taken. We have heard a few
hints of what may be forthcoming. We aren’t going to
like them.
We cannot stand idly by. There is no legislative
vehicle that is pending for current action. That
strategy has been thwarted by the Bush
Administration and the Republican congressional
leadership in the past, but this is a new moment for
the Administration and Congress. So we also have to
find new and creative avenues to protest, pressure
for change, and let the American public know the
truth and viciousness of what is happening. We can
flood the White House with our protests; we can ask
Congress to rein in these unchecked OFAC actions; we
can share our outrage through the press, community
events, and direct actions. Some groups have chosen
to undertake travel challenges as a way to claim our
rights; others have chosen legal action in our
courts; still others are using the arts and culture
to protest.
Here are three ideas for action NOW:
Call the White House, 202.456.1414 (switchboard)
or 202-456-1111 (comment line), or fax 202-456-2461.
Tell the President to stop punishing U.S. citizens
who want to travel to Cuba, visit their families in
Cuba, or exchange with Cuban academics, churches,
etc. Choose your favorite policy absurdity. It is
our right to travel to Cuba and interact with
Cubans, as we are free to do with every other
country in the world.
Call your member of Congress (representative and
both senators) to make them aware of this disturbing
and growing trend of separation, isolation, and
demonization in U.S. policy toward Cuba. Here’s a
suggested message: “In the weeks leading up to new
recommendations from the Bush Administration
regarding policy toward Cuba, harsh and callous
actions have been taken against academic
organizations, humanitarian groups, churches, travel
agencies, and others wishing to have a healthy and
interactive relationship with Cubans. Some examples
are: (your top two or three). I loudly protest these
actions by the administration and call upon Congress
to take action to put an end to unrestrained actions
by the Bush Administration to unwarrantedly separate
the U.S. and Cuban people. Congress has the power to
end this outrage; do it now.” To find your
members’
contact information, go to www.senate.gov and
www.house.gov. Or
call the U.S. Capitol Switchboard,
202.224.3121, and ask to be transferred to your
member’s office.