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US
offers to lift Cuba embargo if Havana embraces democracy
By P. Parameswaran
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com
08 24 06
The United States, keeping up the pressure on Cuba in the absence of
ailing leader Fidel Castro, said Wednesday it would lift a 44-year trade
embargo if the communist government embraced democracy.
Tom Shannon, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs,
said the US administration, "in consultation with Congress,"
would "lift the embargo" if the Cuban interim government accepted
democratic rule, respected human rights and paved the way for free elections.
He said that in 2002, President George W. Bush made a similar offer
but it was rejected by Castro, who on July 31 provisionally handed over
power to his brother Raul Castro after undergoing major surgery.
"The offer is still on the table," Shannon said, apparently
aiming the proposal now at the interim government.
"If the Cuban regime were prepared to free political prisoners,
respect human rights, especially those rights most important for the
effective exercise of democracy, if you are prepared to permit the creation
of independent organisations ... and if you are prepared to create a
mechanism and a pathway towards elections, then we would, in consultation
with the Congress, look to find ways to lift the embargo," Shannon
told a news conference.
The trade embargo, imposed in 1962 after Fidel Castro defeated an unsucessful
CIA-backed Cuban invasion, has been steadily tightened under President
Bush's two terms despite overwhelming calls in the United Nations to
end the sanctions.
Asked whether he thought the junior Castro was more open to talks with
the United States, Shannon said the political situation was still fluid
in Cuba.
"In regard to Raul Castro or whomever might be representing the
regime in Cuba, I think we are in a moment in which the future leadership
structure still has not been defined," he said.
What was occurring, he added, was "a transfer of power to institutions
and not to individuals" and that Fidel Castro would be the "ultimate
arbiter" in any power sharing arrangement.
The junior Castro, in his first public statement last week since taking
over from the bearded strongman who has ruled Cuba for nearly 48 years,
said that he had mobilized tens of thousands of reservists and militia
members to face a possible US invasion threat while his elder brother
recuperated from intestinal surgery.
Washington has dismissed suggestions it would take advantage of Castro's
illness to foment a crisis in Cuba, but reiterated demands for free
elections and democratic change in the Americas' only one-party communist
regime.
But just last week the United States named a special "manager"
for its intelligence operations against Cuba and its strong ally Venezuela.
In addition, a commission on Cuba that Bush created in 2003 to help
defeat the Castro regime has recommended a series of steps to speed
up the emergence of democracy, including funding for dissidents and
support for an eventual transition government committed to holding free
elections.
Shannon said that Washington's goal to bring about democracy would "suck
the venom and the fear out of the Cuban system."
He likened the interim period following senior Castro's ceding of power
to his brother as "fraught with anxiety inside of Cuba" and
warned of the prospect of "greater repression."
"Because a regime that finds itself in a moment of power transfer,
especially a transfer from a leader such as Fidel Castro to, effectively,
institutions, to bureaucrats, is one which is going to be inherently
unstable," he said.
AFP
23 2301 GMT 08 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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