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Rice: US not ready to lift Cuba trade embargo despite storm
September 7, 2008


US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice meets with Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika (unseen) prior to a joint dinner in Algiers, September 6. The United States is not prepared to lift its trade embargo against Cuba, Rice said Sunday, after Havana urged Washington to ease restrictions in the wake of a devastating hurricane.(AFP/Fayez Nureldine)AFP - The United States is not prepared to lift its trade embargo against Cuba, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Sunday, after Havana urged Washington to ease restrictions in the wake of a devastating hurricane.

"I don't think in the context that we see now that the lifting of the embargo would be wise," Rice told reporters during a visit to Morocco.

On Saturday Cuba's Foreign Ministry sought an easing of the decades-old embargo to allow US firms to open private lines of credit for food imports to the Caribbean island reeling from Hurricane Gustav, and as another major storm loomed.

"If the US government has the real will to cooperate with the Cuban people after the hurricane tragedy, it is requested that they... suspend restrictions that block US companies from offering private commercial credit" that would allow Cuba to buy food from the United States, Cuba's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The United States was also urged to "permit the sale to Cuba of emergency supplies," according to the statement, which did not mention the US offer of 100,000 dollars in aid made earlier this week to the Cuban Interests Section in Washington.

Gustav, a powerful Category Four hurricane, slammed into western Cuba August 30, causing major flooding and destroying or seriously damaging more than 140,000 homes and buildings.

Meanwhile another dangerous Category Four storm, Hurricane Ike, appears poised to slam the island of more than 11 million from the east on Sunday or Monday.

In a column in Cuban state media on Wednesday, ailing former president Fidel Castro said Gustav hit his country like a nuclear blast, estimating it would take three to four billion dollars to cope with the emergency.

Castro's younger brother Raul became president in a historic handover of power in February, but the administration of US President George W. Bush has maintained its tough line against Havana.

The US decision to contact Havana about aid was in keeping with past moves to offer disaster relief and does not mark a shift in US government policy toward isolating the communist island nation, officials had said in Washington.

Following earlier hurricane damage, since 2000 the US government has allowed cash-and-carry trade, with restrictions, which allows Cuba to purchase food and medicine from the United States, as long as they are purchased in cash, despite the full US economic embargo in place since 1962.



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