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Cuba takes up U.S. offer of hurricane aid

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  • Cuba takes up U.S. offer of hurricane aid

    Cuba takes up U.S. offer of hurricane aid

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Cuba has unexpectedly agreed to a quiet U.S. offer of emergency aid after Hurricane Wilma, and three U.S. citizens will travel to Cuba to assess needs there, the State Department said Thursday.

    Washington has routinely offered humanitarian relief for hurricanes and other disasters in Cuba, and Cuban leader Fidel Castro himself has routinely turned the offers down. After Hurricane Dennis pummeled the island in July, Castro expressed gratitude but rejected Washington's offer of $50,000 in aid.

    "This was the first time they have accepted an offer of assistance," McCormack said.

    Washington sent a diplomatic note to Cuban officials on Tuesday, a day after the storm pounded the island nation, offering to send emergency supplies. Cuba accepted the offer Wednesday, McCormack said.

    The State Department did not specify what supplies might be sent, but humanitarian assistance generally covers food, medicine, related supplies or emergency housing.

    A three-person team from the U.S. Agency for International Development is making travel arrangements now, McCormack said. Additional aid offers would be based on what that team found, and all aid would go to Cuba indirectly, through aid groups, McCormack said.

    Cuba and the United States do not have full diplomatic relations, a legacy of more than 40 years of Cold War acrimony. A U.S. trade embargo on Cuba has been in place since the Kennedy administration. More recently, the Bush administration has branded Cuba one of the world's few remaining "outposts of tyranny" in a league with Myanmar, Belarus and Zimbabwe.

    Havana offered 1,600 doctors to help victims of Hurricane Katrina, which hit the United States on August 29. The State Department said the Cuban offer was not needed because enough American doctors had offered their services.

    Floodwaters in Havana caused damage to historic buildings and the famed Malecon seawall. Dozens of city blocks were flooded by the storm, but no deaths were reported in Havana. Wilma has been blamed for at least 22 deaths, five in Florida, 12 in Haiti, at least 4 in Mexico and 1 in Jamaica.

    http://www.worldaffairsboard.com/new...newthread&f=51
    "Every man has his weakness. Mine was always just cigarettes."

  • #2
    Good for the US.

    It is humanity which matters and not politics!

    I wonder which all countries are ready to help Cuba


    "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination."

    I don't have to attend every argument I'm invited to.

    HAKUNA MATATA

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