U.S. investigating travelers to Cuba
Last summer, the Pastors for Peace Friendshipment Caravan went to Cuba with
over 100 volunteers, the vast majority of them from the U.S., as did a comparable
number of persons organized by the Venceremos Brigade, a Cuba solidarity
group.
None of them sought a license for Cuba travel, as required by U.S. government
regulations. Pastors for Peace also chose not to obtain a license for taking
tons of medical and humanitarian aid to Cuba. On the agenda for both groups
was defiance of U.S. policies towards Cuba in the form of civil disobedience.
Behavior like this was bound to catch the attention of the Bush administration,
and in October the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control
(OFAC) sent letters to the groups asking for information about the people
who went to Cuba, their activities there, and their travel arrangements.
The Venceremos Brigade sees the request for information as a possible first
step in government plans to invoke penalties. The Brigade indicated through
its attorney that it would provide no information to OFAC.
These actions come on the heels of tightened restrictions imposed by the
Bush government on legal travel to Cuba. Cuban Americans, for example, may
no longer enjoy yearly visits with relatives in Cuba. They now have to wait
three years between visits, and then only after obtaining special approval.
In its letter, OFAC suggested that the Venceremos Brigade (VB) was acting
as a "travel service provider," a category by which OFAC identifies those
agencies and organizations it allows to send people to Cuba legally.
According to a Nov. 13 press statement, the Brigade rejects the suggestion.
"The VB is an anti-imperialist education project that works to develop friendship
with the Cuban people. … The VB travels to Cuba without requesting a license,
pointing out that the restrictions on travel imposed by the US government
are a violation of the U.S. Constitution and of international law."
Once in Cuba, Brigade members worked with the Cuban people renovating schools
and building a rehabilitation center.
IFCO/Pastors for Peace also refused to supply information to OFAC, and in
a letter signed by members of its board of directors — among them six members
of the clergy — the solidarity group said its actions are determined by religious
beliefs, the biblical injunction that "one must love thy neighbor." Cuba
is a neighbor, they said, and Pastors for Peace will not obey human laws
that do harm to a neighbor.
See also: "What's Happening on Travel to Cuba"