U.S. senators move to end Cuba travel ban

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – A bipartisan group of U.S.  senators introduced a bill yesterday to allow U.S. citizens to  travel freely to Cuba and predicted Congress would approve it  as a step toward ending the five-decade-old U.S. embargo.

“I think there’s sufficient votes in both the House (of  Representatives) and the Senate to finally get it passed,”  Democratic Senator Byron Dorgan said at a news conference.

Dorgan, whose home state of North Dakota could benefit from  increased agricultural sales to Cuba, introduced the bill along  with fellow Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd and Republican  Senators Richard Lugar and Mike Enzi. Seventeen other senators  also are sponsoring the measure. A companion bill introduced in  the House earlier this year has 121 co-sponsors. Congressional opponents of any move to ease the embargo  promised a tough fight to keep this measure from becoming law. “This is the time to support pro-democracy activists in  Cuba, not provide the Castro regime with a resource windfall,”  Senator Mel Martinez, a Florida Republican who was the first  Cuban-American elected to the Senate, said in a statement.

President Barack Obama said during last year’s presidential  campaign he favored easing U.S. restrictions on family travel  to Cuba and the sending of cash to family members.

But he stopped short of supporting the lifting of the trade  embargo, which a growing number of U.S. lawmakers believe has  failed to bring about democratic change in communist-led Cuba. Vice President Joe Biden told reporters “no” when asked in  Chile on Saturday whether the United States would lift the  embargo, as many in Latin American favour.

Obama is expected to face pressure from regional leaders to  improve U.S. relations with Cuba when he travels to Trinidad in  mid-April for the Summit of the Americas meeting.

Washington slapped economic sanctions on Cuba in 1960 after  Fidel Castro’s leftist government nationalized U.S. sugar  mills, oil refineries and other assets. A full U.S. embargo was  enforced in 1962 as Cuba became a close Soviet ally.

Travel to Cuba by U.S. citizens was banned after the Cuban  missile crisis, which brought the world close to nuclear war.

Efforts to loosen the embargo remain politically difficult  because of the influence of Cuban-American emigres in Florida,  a state often important in deciding U.S. elections. Staunch  anti-Castro exiles argue that allowing tourism and more trade  with Cuba will help prop up communism on the island.