Pages

Monday, May 11, 2009

Cuba's calls for normal relations with EU face resistance

Cuba's calls for normal relations with EU face resistance
Europe News

May 11, 2009, 18:27 GMT

Brussels - Cuba on Monday asked the European Union to normalize its
relations with the Latin American island nation, but the call was met
with resistance from the bloc's Czech presidency.

'Cuba enjoys normal relations with practically every country in the
world and is willing to advance the normalization of its relations with
the EU,' said Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla on the
sidelines of a meeting with top EU officials in Brussels.

However, Czech Foreign Minister Jan Kohout stressed that human rights
remained a matter of 'concern' for the EU, and noted that any decision
to normalize relations would have to be taken by the bloc's member states.

'One of the biggest values of the EU is the safeguard of human rights.
We expressed our concerns about human rights (in Cuba), and in June we
will evaluate our common position,' said Kohout, whose country has in
the past sided with anti-Castro hardliners.

The EU introduced mild sanctions against Cuba following its Black Spring
crackdown on dissidents in 2003, when the country's communist regime
arrested 75 government critics, including intellectuals and human-rights
activists.

The sanctions, which included limits on high-level government visits and
the role of EU diplomats in Cuba's cultural events, were suspended in
2005 and lifted by EU leaders in June, after Raul Castro took over
control of the country from his ageing brother Fidel.

However, divisions among the EU's 27 member states on how to deal with
Cuba have lead to a compromise solution whereby the bloc keeps reviewing
its so-called 'common position' vis-a-vis Cuba once a year - a practice
that Rodriguez Parrilla described on Monday as 'outdated' and 'obsolete.'

Louis Michel, the European Commissioner in charge of development and
humanitarian aid, openly sided with doves such as Spain by proposing
that governments should raise difficult questions such as human rights,
but also 'listen to each other' and follow the principle of
'non-interference.'

'I believe that this political dialogue will finish at some moment and I
hope that we will be able to lift, or at least modify, our common
position soon,' Michel said.

Rodriguez Parrilla's visit to Brussels comes at a fluid time in the
world's relations with the communist Caribbean island, after President
Barack Obama recently relaxed travel restrictions for US citizens
imposed by his predecessor, George W Bush.

While in Brussels, the minister was to meet the EU's foreign policy
chief, Javier Solana, and exchange views on a series of issues,
including immigration
and the imminent closure of the United States' infamous prison camp in
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

EU foreign ministers are due to discuss whether to normalize relations
with Cuba at a meeting scheduled to take place on June 15 in Luxembourg.

Cuba's calls for normal relations with EU face resistance - Monsters and
Critics (12 May 2009)

http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/europe/news/article_1476479.php/Cubas_calls_for_normal_relations_with_EU_face_resistance

No comments: