Travel restrictions from the U.S. into Cuba may be loosened as early as
September, White House officials told the New York Times this week.
Word
is the Obama administration is set to announce that it will ease travel
restrictions for academic researchers, and religious and cultural
groups that were set in place by President George W. Bush. The
restrictions would look more the way they did during President
Clinton’s administration, when the U.S. cultivated “people to people”
policies that allowed athletes, musicians, artists and academics to
travel to and from Cuba.
“We will continue to pursue policies that advance the U.S. national
interest,” The New York Times reports White House spokesman Mike Hammer said in a statement, “And
support the Cuban people’s desire to freely determine their country’s
future.” The Cuban American lobby, led by Sen. Robert Menendez from New
Jersey, has already expressed its disagreement with the proposed
policy. Menendez and other critics say it would allow more people to
send money to Fidel Castro’s regime.
The administration is soldiering on though. The only question now
seems to be the timing around the announcement. Some worry
announcements will not be made until after midterm elections in
November, but other congressional insiders have said that the policy
may be announced before Congress returns from its mid-September recess.
In 2009, President Obama also made it easier for Cuban-Americans to
travel and send money back to family in the country. These revised
travel restrictions would not touch the decades long trade embargo,
though. That policy is not up for debate right now.
Here now, a look at the effects of the U.S. embargo on Cuban life and economy.
Photo: Creative Commons/Zoriah
Photo: Creative Commons/scottmontreal
Photo: Creative Commons/Leandro Neumann Ciuffo
Photo: Creative Commons/localsurfer
Photo: Creative Commons/STML
Photo: Creative Commons/springfield
Photo: Creative Commons/STM


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