Cuba's trade minister said today that US President Barack Obama's moves to ease the five-decade embargo on the communist island are "incomplete and insufficient."
With Obama heading toward a potentially historic meeting with Cuban President Raul Castro this week, Trade and Foreign Investment Minister Rodrigo Malmierca criticised the US leader's limited steps to ease the crippling trade and financial embargo the US has maintained on Cuba since 1962.
After the old Cold War foes announced a historic rapprochement on December 17, Obama loosened several components of the embargo, allowing more travel from the US to Cuba, raising the limit on cash remittances to the island and easing restrictions on certain kinds of trade, among other measures.
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He said the measures were a "step in the right direction" but did not go far enough toward ending the embargo.
Obama "has vast prerogatives -- far beyond the measures approved last January -- that he could use to make substantive steps toward normalizing bilateral relations," he said.
He called on Washington to allow Havana to use dollars for international transactions and clear the way for Cuban exports to the US beyond the small quantities of rum and cigars that Obama allowed travellers to bring back from the island.
"Beyond traditional goods like rum and tobacco, there are others of excellent quality that can be included in this possible exchange, such as biotechnology products," he said.
Obama and Castro will cross paths at the Summit of the Americas in Panama on Friday and Saturday, which could yield the first substantive meeting between US and Cuban leaders in half a century.
The two men shook hands briefly at the memorial service for Nelson Mandela in South Africa in December 2013.
To lift the full embargo, which Havana says has cost it USD 100 billion, Obama would need the blessing of the Republican-controlled Congress.