Last US cruise ship departs from Cuba after fresh sanctions

World Saturday 08/June/2019 14:35 PM
By: Times News Service
Last US cruise ship departs from Cuba after fresh sanctions

Miami: The last US cruise liner to stop over in Cuba sailed out again on Wednesday as new US sanctions against the Caribbean island came into force.

Cubans who have welcomed and benefited from such visits as part of a rapproachment with the US under Barack Obama in 2015 and 2016 watched sadly as the Empress of the Seas left the island.

Passengers waved small red, white, and blue Cuban flags from the deck.

The Bahamian-flagged ship operated by US company Royal Caribbean Cruises docked in Havana on Tuesday just as the new sanctions were announced, taking many passengers by surprise. It was supposed to stay for two days, but had to leave early.

President Donald Trump ordered a halt to these cruise ship stopovers and a clamp-down on US visas to visiting Cuba as part of a strategy to cut the flow of dollars to a country that Washington accuses of helping prop up Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

Mario Diaz, a 19-year-old disc jockey waiting for a bus as he watched the cruise ship depart, said Obama’s visit here a year after the longtime Cold War foes restored relations in 2015 was an unforgettable event and one that brought great hope.

“All this is so sad, really,” said Lopez, “for Trump to come in and turn everything back from one day to the next.”

Americans who were on the departing ship said they knew nothing about the new US sanctions. Some found out while walking around Havana during the abbreviated port call.

“I’m one of hundreds of very angry passengers aboard a cruise ship in the middle of the Caribbean,” said Cindy Hamilton, a nurse from Terre Haute, Indiana, said in a tweet. “We all planned this cruise anticipating our stop in Cuba. Very upset!”

The Treasury Department banned group educational travel, cruise ship and private yacht visits by Americans, taking aim at the most common ways US tourists and Cuban-Americans visit the Caribbean island.

The move could constitute a heavy hit on Cuba, which saw more than a quarter-million US visitors in the first four months of 2019, almost double the figure from a year earlier.

The Cruise Lines International Association said the new US measure will affect nearly 800,000 reservations that were already made or being finalised.

Cuba and the United States restored ties in 2015 and Obama himself visited Havana in a historic presidential trip in March 2016, meeting with then-president Raul Castro.

Weeks later, the ban was lifted on US commercial ship visits, opening the door for the Caribbean cruise ship industry to expand stops in Cuba.

American tourism in Cuba had taken off after Obama moved to ease the half-century trade embargo against the communist government in 2014 — even though continuing restrictions kept visits nominally in the realm of cultural and artistic exchanges and business dealings.

However, the Obama initiative was attacked by Trump, who began restricting relations within months of taking power in 2017.