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Washington’s
Blockade Prevents US Sailboats from Competing in Cuba
HAVANA, Cuba, Aug 10 (ACN)
The participation of US boats in sail regattas in Cuba is
hindered by the laws of the economic, financial and
commercial blockade imposed by Washington on the Caribbean
island.
Jose
Manuel
Diaz,
Commodore
of the
Hemingway
International
Yacht
Club,
told ACN
that
this
policy
deprives
US
citizens
of
traveling
freely
by boat
to the
island
to
maintain
the
friendly
nautical
relations
existing
between
the two
countries,
which
this
year
mark
their
80th
anniversary.
Diaz
explained
that
such
restriction
is a
flagrant
violation
of the
United
Nations
Convention
on the
Law of
the Sea,
approved
in
Jamaica
in 1982.
This
treaty
makes it
very
clear
that all
countries
with
coasts
should
give
permission
so
foreign
ships
can
exercise
their
“right
of
innocent
passage.”
However,
the
United
States
violates
this
treaty.
The
Commodore
pointed
out
that,
according
to US
presidential
regulations,
the
ships
anchoring
in Cuban
ports
can be
held in
custody
and
confiscated
for
having
violated
this
arbitrary
measure.
The
nautical
community
of that
northern
country
is eager
for the
opportunity
of being
able to
come to
Cuba and
get to
know the
island
and
enjoy
the
hospitality
and
culture
of the
Cuban
people,
he
commented.
Several
historic
documents
point
out that
sailboat
regattas
between
the two
nations
began in
1930,
and that
around
1922
there
were
already
motorboat
competitions
with
Miami
teams,
which
traveled
to
Havana.
There
were
regattas
between
1996 and
2000,
but
starting
from the
latter
the US
travel
ban
strengthened,
which
prevented
even US
scientists,
musicians
and
athletes
to take
part in
congresses,
workshops,
concerts
and
competitions,
like the
Marabana.
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