U.S. allows unlimited visits to relatives in Cuba

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Americans with relatives in  Cuba can send them unlimited cash and visit the island as long  and often as they would like under new rules that fissured a  nearly five-decade trade embargo yesterday.

The rules, made effective immediately by the U.S. Treasury  Department, fleshed out an announcement by President Barack  Obama in April to ease U.S. trade restrictions imposed on Cuba  after Fidel Castro’s leftist revolution half a century ago.

Until now, Cuban-Americans had been allowed to travel to  the island only once a year and were limited to sending only  $1,200 per person in cash to needy family members in Cuba.

But now they can send as much money as they want to a  larger group of relatives that includes aunts, uncles, cousins  and second cousins, a reversal of a restriction introduced by  the Bush administration in a bid to squeeze Cuba’s communist  government financially.

“That is something that will help a lot,” said Enrique  Gonzalez, a 64-year-old military retiree in Havana. “Despite  the global financial crisis, the relatives will send a lot of  remittances, which will help everybody here,” he said.

But the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, which  has policed the trade embargo and fined Americans caught  spending money in Cuba, said U.S. visitors could only spend  $179 a day on trips to the island.

That is the same amount as the U.S. State Department’s per  diem rate for official visits. Previously, family travelers  were allowed to spend just $50 a day.

Separate regulations issued by the U.S. Commerce Department  doubled the value limit for gift parcels sent to Cubans to $800  per month and widened the allowed recipients. Non-monetary  gifts could only be sent previously to immediate family members  and they may now be sent to any individual or to independent  religious, educational and charitable organizations in Cuba.

The Commerce Department also eliminated a 44-pound limit on  personal baggage to Cuba and allows visitors to bring donated  personal communications devices such as mobile phone systems,  computers, software, satellite receivers and digital cameras.

But the loosening of the rules for Cuban-Americans did not  affect a general ban on travel by American citizens to Cuba and  tight restrictions on academic and cultural exchanges.

The rules provide for some changes that could lay the  groundwork for future trade links between the United States and  Cuba in banking and telecommunications.

Relaxation of the remittance rules allow U.S. banks to set  up exchange arrangements with Cuban institutions to handle the  transfers. The lack of such financial exchanges was considered  a hindrance to the growth of agricultural trade with Cuba that  was first allowed nearly a decade ago.

The Treasury rules allow U.S. telecommunications companies  to set up fibre-optic cable and satellite links and enter into  cell-phone roaming service agreements with Cuba. They allow  U.S. residents to pay for satellite radio and television  services provided to Cuban individuals by third-country firms.

The rules allow transactions and travel related to  establishing telecoms services between the two countries.

Washington attorney Robert Muse, who specializes in Cuba  issues and closely follows the Cuba embargo regulations, said  he was encouraged by this provision, which could mean a genuine  loosening of the U.S. trade sanctions in the telecoms area.

“If they have allowed the U.S. telecommunications industry  to actually provide real technology in pursuit of  telecommunications projects in Cuba, then … it opens a market  for U.S. suppliers that had been shut out of Cuba,” he added.