SILENT VIGIL demanding continued travel and engagement with Cuba.

New York – New Jersey CubaSi

Contact: Joan Gibbs – 718-789-1801 joanpgibbs2012@gmail.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

New York 14 June 2017… On Thursday, June 15th hundreds of New Yorkers will gather at 4:30PM in front of Trump Tower – 725 5th Avenue at 56th Street –In a SILENT VIGIL demanding continued travel and engagement with Cuba.

On Friday President Donald Trumo is expected to announce his administration’s new “Cuba Policy” and has promised to overturn the moves toward full normalization with our closest neighbor to the South.

Late last month the conservative blog The Daily Caller reported that Trump was planning to make good on his campaign promise to “terminate” the Obama administration’s opening of engagement with Cuba. Just over two and a half years after the United States finally took steps to end more than half a century of hostility and restrictions on trade and travel, Trump wants us to go backwards.

Polls and statistics show that the majority of Washington policy-makers, as well as Cuban-Americans and U.S. Citizens at large, favor engagement with Cuba. So today we ask: Is it really “America First?” or Trump and the small power-hungry Cuban-American right wing FIRST?

We don’t want to return to the outdated, antiquated and cruel cold war policies of the past. We need friendship and peace in our hemisphere.

WE CANNOT SIT STILL!!!

Join us this Thursday – outside Trump Tower – at 4:30 PM – Let our legislators know we want to continue the path towards normalization with Cuba..

End the Travel Ban!!! End the Embargo!!!

Cruise industry committed to Cuba

Cruise industry committed to Cuba
In 2017, the island expects to receive three times more cruise passengers than last year

Author: Katheryn Felipe González | informacion@granma.cu
june 7, 2017 11:06:21

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Cuban port authorities are very conscientious of the loading capacities of each destination. Photo: Kimani Hernández.
Many experts define cruises as an exploratory form of tourism that, through short stays in each port, allows travelers to visit and learn about various destinations. Undoubtedly, it is a modality that at the very least is effective and solvent.

A particular feature of the Cuban tourist boom of recent years has been the increased arrival of cruise ships to the island. Of the more than four million tourists who visited Cuba in 2016, 112,000 arrived aboard cruises.

In fact, the cruise industry has been gaining in popularity globally. According to data from the World Tourism Organization, there are increasing numbers of cruise ships and other recreational vessels visiting the most diverse ports around the world.

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Cienfuegos is one of the Cuban ports offering international departures. Photo: Julio Martínez Molina
According to these figures, cruises are among the tourist modalities that have grown the most in Cuba and the Caribbean over the last five years. While the region receives an annual average of 50,000 vessels of all kinds, it also welcomes about 60% of the cruise ships operating on the planet Continue reading Cruise industry committed to Cuba

More than 50 senators support eliminating restrictions on travel to Cuba

CUBA

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MAY 26, 2017 12:27 PM
More than 50 senators support eliminating restrictions on travel to Cuba
BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES
ngameztorres@elnuevoherald.com

As the Cuba policy review reaches its final stage, politicians, companies and organizations that support the policy of engagement are making an extra effort to send this message to Donald Trump: Mr. President, don’t eliminate opportunities to travel to the island.
Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) and Jeff Flake (R-Arizona) reintroduced a bill Thursday to eliminate all prohibitions on travel to Cuba. The bill, which had only eight cosponsors when first filed in 2015, now has the support of 55 senators from both parties.
“As the administration is finalizing its Cuba policy review, it is important to show that a bipartisan majority in the Senate supports not only not rolling back the measures that President Obama took to expand travel, but to go even further and remove all restrictions,” James Williams, president of Engage Cuba, told el Nuevo Herald. Engage Cuba is a coalition of companies and organizations that lobby to eliminate sanctions on Cuba.
The bill would remove all restrictions for U.S. citizens and residents on travel to Cuba, and will authorize associated banking transactions made by travelers. A similar proposal was presented in the House but with fewer sponsors.
Even if the bill is not discussed on the Senate floor, said Williams, it sends a strong message to the White House that there is support for the current policy of engagement.
In a separate move to push the agenda forward, another piece of legislation was introduced on Friday to lift the trade embargo. The Freedom to Export to Cuba Act of 2017 was introduced by Sens. Leahy, Flake, Amy Klobuchar (D-Minnesota) and Mike Enzi (R-Wyoming).

Continue reading More than 50 senators support eliminating restrictions on travel to Cuba

Cuba celebrates its African roots

Cuba celebrated Africa Day this Thursday, May 25, with an event held in Havana, attended by members of the Party Political Bureau, Salvador Valdés Mesa, a vice president of the Council of State; Esteban Lazo Hernandez, president of the National Assembly of People’s Power; and Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla, minister of Foreign Affairs
Author: Darcy Borrero Batista | informacion@granma.cu
may 26, 2017 15:05:48

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Photo: Jose M. Correa
“Africa will always be able to count on Cuba,” Cuban Deputy Foreign Minister Rogelio Sierra stated this Thursday during a political-cultural act in Havana, on the occasion of Africa Day.
Presided by members of the Party Political Bureau, Salvador Valdés Mesa, a vice president of the Council of State; Esteban Lazo Hernandez, president of the National Assembly of People’s Power; and Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla, minister of Foreign Affairs, the event was an opportunity to recall the shared history of Cuba and Africa.
In addition to thanking African nations for their position against the economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed by the United States on the island, Sierra highlighted Cuba’s support for the continent, which represents almost a third of UN member states and is currently the second fastest growing region of the world.
The deputy minister recalled the words of Comandante en Jefe Fidel Castro when he stated that Africa does not need interference, but rather the transfer of financial resources.
Sierra also emphasized that some twenty African delegations accompanied the tributes to the historical leader of the Cuban Revolution following his death last November; and stressed that Havana is one of the global capitals with the largest African diplomatic presence, after the opening of the embassies of Niger, Kenya and Seychelles.
“Some 6,000 Cubans are collaborating today in Africa; and more than 29,000 Africans from 54 countries have graduated in Cuba,” he noted, while emphasizing that Cuba is committed to contributing to Africa’s development.
He added that Africa Day, which marks the founding in 1963 of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) – today the African Union (AU) – offers an opportunity to recall Fidel’s tours of the continent 45 years ago. The OAU was the cornerstone of institutional strengthening and African cooperation, he noted.
Meanwhile, Guinean representative to the AU, Hawa Diakité Kaba, whose country currently holds the pro tempore presidency of the organization, recalled Fidel’s strong ties with African revolutionaries such as Neto, Mandela and Lumumba.
On behalf of the AU, Diakité sent greetings from the president of Guinea to Army General Raúl Castro, and described the relations between the bloc and the island as profound and historic, expressed since the 1960s through Cuban support for the liberation movements of Angola, Ethiopia, Congo, among other nations.
Speaking before Cuban Foreign Ministry, Party and government officials, and members and heads of mission of the diplomatic corps accredited in Havana, as well as African students on the island, Diakité expressed her gratitude for Cuba’s assistance in areas such as health and education, an example of South-South cooperation.