Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Culture > Cuba > Americans trave...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 85382 of 92156
Post > Topic >>

Americans traveling to Cuba

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 5, 2008 at 03:00 PM

Saturday, May 3, 2008
Americans traveling to Cuba
Thousands of Americans flout U.S. travel ban to see the 'forbidden 
treasure' of Cuba.
By WILL WEISSERT
The Associated Press

Barack Obama would lift restrictions on visits by Cuban Americans to the 
hemisphere's only communist country if elected president. A growing 
chorus of Democratic and Republican lawmakers would go even further, 
loosening the U.S. embargo enough to allow all Americans to travel to
Cuba.

But thousands of U.S. tourists already travel to Cuba behind 
Wa****ngton's back, and many say being sneaky is part of the fun. Some 
are scrambling to get to the island while Fidel Castro is still alive, 
fearing the U.S. government could scrap the travel ban once he's gone 
and bring profound change to Cuba.

"The fact that you're not supposed to be there, that was the top for 
me," said Amit, 29, a visitor from New York City.

"I was like, 'It's time to go,'" said Amit, who asked that his full name 
not be published to avoid U.S. fines. "You just don't know what Cuba 
will be like after Castro's gone."

Traveling to Cuba is not illegal for Americans, but provisions of the 
Trading With the Enemy Act prohibit spending money in Cuba without 
authorization. If caught, unauthorized U.S. tourists can face civil 
fines of up to $55,000, though many settle for smaller amounts. Four of 
those fined since January 2006 were people involved in making Oliver 
Stone's do***entary about Castro, "Comandante."

The U.S. Treasury Department issued 40,308 licenses for family travel in 
2006, almost all to Cuban Americans, and the Cuban government counts 
these travelers as Cubans, not Americans.

Separately, Cuba said 20,100 Americans visited the country through June 
2007, almost all presumably without U.S. permission.

Other than family members, the U.S. government had granted permission 
491 times for people involved in religious, educational and humanitarian 
projects. Some other Americans – including journalists and politicians
– 
can come without licenses, although few do.

Cuba said about 37,000 Americans not of Cuban origin came in 2006 – down

from the more than 84,500 it re****ted in 2003, before the latest 
restrictions.

The American Society of Travel Agents recently estimated that nearly 1.8 
million Americans would visit in the first three years following an end 
to the travel ban.

"We wanted to get here before all the other Americans come and ruin it 
all," said Bridget, a 20-year-old from Minneapolis, Minn., who wandered 
Old Havana's colonial streets last year with her friend Erik. They 
wouldn't give their last names.

"It's forbidden treasure," said Erik, also from the Twin Cities. "It 
will be so Americanized in a few years. Just like Cancun," where U.S. 
franchises from Hard Rock Cafe to Hooters tend to drown out Mexican
culture.

Some Americans sail to Cuba, but most fly through Canada, Mexico, the 
Bahamas or Jamaica. Cuban tourist cards can be purchased at 
third-country air****ts and customs officials usually stamp only these 
loose-leaf visas, not the permanent pages of U.S. pass****ts.

Bridget and Erik sent money orders to a U.S. travel agent recommended by 
a friend who had visited Cuba, and flew from Detroit to Cancun. A man at 
the Cubana Airlines ticket counter then gave them their Cuban tourist 
cards, hotel vouchers and tickets for a connecting flight to Havana.

Traveling to Cuba is not as easy as punching dates into an Internet 
site, however. Travelocity agreed to pay $182,750 in fines for booking 
nearly 1,500 flights between the United States and Cuba from 1998 to 
2004. The company says it fixed technical glitches and no longer lets 
such trips go through.

Danielle Drobot, who spent a legal semester in Cuba while pursuing an 
International Studies degree at the University of North Carolina, 
predicted that "it will be the end of the U.S.-Cuba blockade, not 
necessarily the end of Castro, that forces the economic and political 
systems to change in Cuba."

"As sad as it is," Drobot said, "money talks."

http://www.ocregister.com/articles/cuba-americans-communism-2032330-obama-castro
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Americans traveling to Cuba
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-05-05 15:00:01 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan12V112 Thu Dec 4 18:36:05 CST 2008.