Alabama Congress
favors trade
and travel with Cuba
• The two houses of the state
legislature approved a resolution urging Washington
to end the 45-year-old restrictions, after $20
million in l sales was negotiated
BY GABRIEL MOLINA
THE Alabama state congress has approved a
resolution urging the U.S. Congress to annul all
trade, financial and travel restrictions related to
Cuba.
The AP and AFP news agencies reported that trade
agreements signed on April 26 by Cuba’s food import
firm Alimport and Alabama Agriculture Commissioner
Ron Sparks provide for $20 million worth of sales in
agricultural goods to Cuba, and $7 million of that
was concretized during a trade delegation’s visit to
the island.
During the previous week, Alimport president
Pedro Álvarez informed that U.S. food sales to Cuba
now total more than $1.69 billion since 2001, when
the U.S. Congress approved an amendment authorizing
those transactions, which must be in cash, upfront
without possibility of credit.
"All of those regulations create insecurity...and
are detrimental to businessmen," Álvarez commented
at the time.
The Alimport president most recently spoke during
the signing of an agreement for $30 million in food
imports from the state of Nebraska, with a
delegation led by that state’s Lieutenant Governor
Rick Sheehy and Agriculture Director Greg Ibach.
This year, Cuba has imported from the United
States more than $151 million in products such as
soy, chicken, rice, fruit, flour, wheat, corn, oil,
grains, butter, powdered milk, eggs, cattle and
supermarket products.
The George W. Bush administration has tried to
block the implementation of these trade measures and
the expansion of others, accepting the demands by
Cuban-born Congressional members and other elements
who control the politics and economy of the state of
Florida. These sectors were attributed decisive
importance to Bush’s two electoral victories. It was
in this context that the Alabama state officials and
legislators announced to the media the resolution
passed by the state congress urging U.S. lawmakers
in Washington to end the restrictions and freely
allow those ties.
TRADE EXTREMELY IMPORTANT TO U.S. FARMERS
Senators and U.S. representatives hope that the
resolutions serve as an example for other states.
When asked if he expected other states to follow
suit, Sparks said Alabama was sending a message, the
AP reported. The Alabama commissioner added that the
southern state’s trade relations with Cuba have been
"extremely important to the farmers of Alabama," who
have sold $150 million worth of goods.
Sparks also said that the trade has been an
important boost for port activities, and that it "ensures"
the maintenance of 467,000 jobs in the agricultural
sector, according to the AFP.
Alabama state Senator Hank Sanders said that the
fact that his state legislature is conservative
makes it feasible for similar resolutions to be
approved other states and by Washington.
A second resolution passed by Alabama’s congress
expressed thanks to Alimport’s Álvarez for his
efforts toward normalizing bilateral relations.
The resolutions read out by Sparks were presented
by nine legislators who traveled to Cuba together
with the agriculture commissioner.