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(Washington, DC, April 13, 2009) - President Barack Obama's executive order ending restrictions on Cuban-Americans' travel and remittances to Cuba is a major break from an ineffective and unjust policy, but the US government should take further steps to adopt a new approach toward Cuba, Human Rights Watch said today.
Congress should promptly extend to all Americans the right to travel to Cuba, Human Rights Watch said. At the same time, the Obama administration should work with allies in Europe and Latin America to forge a targeted, multilateral approach toward addressing human rights violations by the Cuban government.
"If President Obama is serious about promoting change in Cuba, this executive order must be part of a larger shift away from the US's unilateral approach toward the Cuban government," said José Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch. "Only by working with its allies in Latin American and Europe will the US be able to chip away at Castro's repressive machinery."
On April 13, Obama issued an executive order to eliminate all limits on travel and remittances by Cuban Americans to Cuba. Previously, the US government only allowed Cuban Americans to visit the island once a year and capped the amount of support Cubans could send to relatives at $75 per month.
Legislation introduced in Congress in February 2009, called the Freedom to Travel to Cuba Act, would extend to all Americans the right to travel to Cuba. Cuba is the only country in the world to which the US government restricts the travel of its citizens.
"Not only did the restrictions cause considerable suffering and violate the rights of Cuban American families, but they completely failed to bring any change to Cuba," Vivanco said. "Congress should build on this momentum to give all Americans the right to travel to Cuba."
A Human Rights Watch report, "Families Torn Apart," documented the human cost of the US restrictions on travel by Cuban Americans and found that they infringed upon the internationally recognized right to freedom of movement, and violated the international prohibition on the involuntary separation of families.
Obama will meet with other Latin American leaders at the Fifth Summit of the Americas from April 17 to 19 in Trinidad and Tobago, where several countries have vowed to raise the issue of US-Cuba relations. Cuba, which was expelled from the Organization of American States in 1962, was not invited to the summit.
"For decades, the US's approach toward Cuba has isolated the United States more than it has isolated the Cuban government," Vivanco said. "If President Obama wants to break from this failed policy and forge new alliances, the Summit of the Americas is the ideal place to start."
To read the October 2005 Human Rights Watch report, "Families Torn Apart: The High Cost of US and Cuban Travel Restrictions," please go here.
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I don't understand why sending money to Cuba is somehow going to help us bring about regime change... I would think that the reverse would be true - keep the financial pressure on, strengthen the emabargo - at some point, there will be riots in the street, and the Cuban people will take back their nation. I hope this time we have the courage to follow through in helping them to do so, unlike the abortive Bay of Pigs fiasco. We owe the Cubans for that, we really do. But helping their economy is a bad move. To be honest, the money would be better spent providing arms to the resistance movement.
I believe we need to make steady progreess in opening up trave to cuba and ultimately ending the embargo. If the travel restrictions were lifted today, Cuba could not deal with the influx of americans.
Not sure what part of the constitution covers equal travel.
You are absolutely right. It's completely unconstitutional to allow some americans to go and to deny the right to others. ridiculous. open it up. NOW.
I agree, dayinthepark.
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