Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Cuba criticizes US ruling on Internet access

Cuba criticizes US ruling on Internet access
By PAUL HAVEN (AP)

HAVANA — Cuba says a U.S. ruling that makes it easier for companies to
provide Internet communications services on the island is meant to
destabilize the country, not loosen Washington's 48-year economic embargo.

"The government of the United States has said clearly that its objective
is to use these services as a tool of subversion and destabilization,"
Josefina Vidal Ferreiro, director of the Cuban Foreign Ministry's North
American affairs office, said Monday in a written response to questions
from The Associated Press.

Last week, the U.S. Treasury Department announced it would allow the
export of Internet communications services and software such as instant
messaging, e-mail and Web browsing to Iran, Sudan and Cuba to help
people in those countries communicate.

Cuba has the lowest level of Internet penetration in the Western
Hemisphere. What services exist are prohibitively expensive for most
people on the island, and many Web sites are blocked.

Opponents say Cuba's communist government intentionally keeps the
Internet out of reach in an effort to control information.

Cuba counters that the U.S. economic embargo is to blame for blocking
construction of a fiber optic cable, leaving the island dependent on
slow, expensive satellite links.

Vidal Ferreiro said the new measures announced by the Treasury
Department would apply only to individuals, not businesses or
institutions, and would do nothing to loosen the grip of the embargo,
which Cuban officials refer to as a "blockade."

"It shows once more that the U.S. government is not interested in
changing its policies nor in developing normal communication with Cuba,"
she said. "This is not a measure that loosens the blockade against Cuba."

In December, American government contractor Alan P. Gross was arrested
in Havana for allegedly handing out communications equipment to members
of the island's tiny Jewish community. Cuba has accused him of spying,
though it has yet to press formal charges.

Gross has been jailed with limited consular access at a high-security
facility in the capital. His arrest has been a major factor in the
worsening relations between Washington and Havana.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i-TnQQ1TbNLfIWi6T-sgSJOgdfNQD9EFAQRO0

No comments:

Post a Comment