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Latest News from OpenCuba.org

The latest updates on our mission to open Cuba to U.S. travelers.

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Thursday, November 19, 2009

OpenCuba submits testimony to Committee on Foreign Affairs

Is it Time to Lift the Ban on Travel to Cuba? That’s the topic of discussion today at hearings before the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs. OpenCuba.org has submitted testimony that provides its views to committee, which is considering ending the Cuba travel ban and giving all U.S. citizens the right and freedom to travel to Cuba. Read the testimony

Update Nov. 20, 2009

Read full transcript of hearings

Watch the hearings (Video requires RealPlayer, which is a free download.)

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Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Petition to end Cuba travel ban reaches 100,000 signatures

OpenCuba.org campaign petitioners call on U.S. government to give all Americans the right and freedom to travel to Cuba

Chicago, IL, November 10, 2009 — The OpenCuba.org campaign (www.OpenCuba.org) today announced that it has passed the important milestone of receiving 100,000 signatures from petitioners calling on the U.S. government to restore to all Americans the freedom and right to travel to Cuba. Today Cuba is the only country in the world to which Americans are banned from traveling.

 ”Never before in the history of the U.S. ban on travel to Cuba has there been such an upwelling of popular support for change,” said Barney Harford, president and CEO of Orbitz Worldwide, which launched the OpenCuba.org campaign. “The bipartisan Freedom to Travel to Cuba Act, which is being considered by the House and Senate this session, already has 180 congressional and 32 senatorial co-sponsors. The 100,000 OpenCuba.org petitioners are sending a powerful message to U.S. lawmakers and President Obama that the time to act is now.”

Americans are currently banned from traveling to Cuba. Cuba is the only country in the world covered by such travel restrictions. Americans today are free to travel to any other country, including countries such as Iran, Libya and North Korea.

Since launching in May, OpenCuba.org has received endorsements from Cuban-American groups including the Cuban American Alliance Education Fund, the Cuban American Commission for Family Rights and Friends of Caritas Cubana. Cuban-American leaders believe that the ban should be lifted in order to encourage the exchange of ideas between the people of the United States and Cuba. “U.S. citizens should have the right to travel to Cuba in order to serve as ambassadors for the values, ideals and freedoms that the United States represents,” said Delvis Fernández Levy, President and Acting Executive Director of the Cuban American Alliance Education Fund.

The OpenCuba.org campaign also has received endorsements from a broad range of non-governmental organizations, industry trade associations and travel companies including:

 

“U.S. lawmakers and President Obama have a historic opportunity in front of them to restore the right and freedom of all Americans to visit Cuba,” said Jake Colvin, vice president, National Foreign Trade Council. “This is a strong reflection of the grassroots support that exists for the complete removal of U.S. travel restrictions.”

For more information on the OpenCuba campaign and to add your support visit www.OpenCuba.org.

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Thursday, October 8, 2009

New regulations ease U.S.-Cuba travel limits

Restrictions on U.S. travel to Cuba are loosening, thanks to some recent changes by the Treasury and Commerce departments. 

The GAO, U.S. Government Accountability Office, released a report last week that details the new regulations. They include authorizing family travel under a general license rather than a specific license. The report notes that the President can authorize travel under a general license for non-family travelers, such as freelance journalists, professional researchers and full-time students. See full report

If you believe in giving all Americans the freedom to travel to Cuba, we encourage you to sign our petition urging lawmakers to end the 50-year-old travel ban.

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Monday, August 31, 2009

Hollywood Stars Visit Cuba

Havana was recently hit with a whirlwind of Hollywood star power with visits from actors Benicio del Toro, Bill Murray, Robert Duvall and James Caan.

Del Toro was in the Cuban capital to accept an award from a local film group for his portrayal of Ernesto “Che” Guevara in the 2008 picture “Che.” The other three stars, accompanied by Hollywood producer Steve Bing, were in Cuba for an unnamed research project.

Despite the travel restrictions on Cuba, many celebrities have visited the country in past years. This recent visit, however, comes after a pledge from the Obama administration to improve Cuban/American relations. Read the full story

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Tuesday, July 7, 2009

National Tour Association: Give Americans the freedom to travel anywhere

By Lisa Simon, Pres. of  the National Tour Association

Travel is the perfect freedom. Through travel, Americans can see the world, experience new cultures, and gain a greater understanding of the people and places around them. Since 1982, ordinary American tourists have not been allowed to travel to Cuba. The National Tour Association, an organization of nearly 4,000 travel professionals from all over the world, believes that the federal government should not restrict travel on the basis of political ideology. Cuba offers natural beauty, colonial architecture and unique culture that all travelers should be able to experience.

Because most Americans have never traveled to Cuba, there is a huge interest in this destination. A recent poll by CNN shows that two-thirds of Americans surveyed think the U.S. should lift the travel ban, and three-quarters think the U.S. should end its estrangement with the country. NTA agrees with the findings of this poll and will continue to take steps to ensure all Americans have the freedom to travel wherever they choose.

Legislation has been introduced in both the House and Senate to lift the travel ban to Cuba. President Obama has already ended restrictions on travel to Cuba by Cuban-American relatives of residents of Cuba. NTA will continue to support the right of all Americans to travel to Cuba. If you believe it is your right to travel anywhere in the world, urge your Congressman to support travel to Cuba by signing this petition.

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Petition to open Cuba tops 50,000 signatures

The OpenCuba.org campaign reached a major milestone last week: More than 50,000 people signed a petition asking the Obama administration and Congress to give all Americans the freedom to travel to Cuba.

Since its launch on May 11, the campaign has attracted a broad spectrum of support. Endorsements have rolled in from the Cuban American Alliance Education Fund, the Cuban American Commission for Family Rights, the National Federation Trade Council, the Adventure Travel Trade Association, and other organizations. See all endorsements 

Barney Harford, President and CEO of Orbitz Worldwide, is planning to deliver the petition to U.S. lawmakers and government officials later this year. Both houses of Congress are considering bills that would end the 50-year travel ban.

News of the petition reaching 50,000 signatures reinforces results from a recent Orbitz-Ipsos poll that shows 67% of Americans say that they would support a policy that would allow all Americans to travel to Cuba. Furthermore, 72% agree that expanding travel and tourism from the U.S. to Cuba would have a positive impact on the day-to-day lives of the Cuban people. More about the poll

Human Rights Watch also advocates opening travel to Cuba, and we hope you will too. Please sign the petition and email 5 of your friends about it too. We believe passionately in the power of travel to transform lives. And we believe that people should have the freedom to travel wherever they choose.

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Friday, June 19, 2009

DC think tank weighs in on OpenCuba.org

See what one of Washington’s leading think tanks has to say about the OpenCuba.org campaign. Phil Peters, of the Lexington Institute, gives his perspective.

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Friday, June 19, 2009

Why Can We Visit Kim Jung Il but Not Old Havana?

By Jake Colvin, National Foreign Trade Council

Chances are, if you are an American citizen, you can pack your bags for a propaganda-filled tour of North Korea but you cannot order up a daiquiri at El Floridita, the bar Ernest Hemingway made famous in Old Havana.  Cuba, it turns out, is the only country on earth that U.S. citizens are largely prohibited from visiting.

Americans are free to travel to countries like Iran, North Korea and Sudan, assuming they can get a visa from their bad actor of choice, but cannot hop on a plane to Cuba thanks to U.S. sanctions.  Perhaps it is time to rethink our approach and open Cuba to American tourists.

There is no shortage of good reasons for allowing Americans to travel to Cuba.  By far the best is that the United States should not be in the business of restricting the right of its citizens to choose where they want to travel.  As President Reagan liked to say, America is the shining city on a hill and the world’s eyes remain focused upon us.  Limiting the freedom of American citizens in an effort to advance the cause of liberty in Cuba is an Orwellian anomaly in U.S. foreign policy that ought to be corrected immediately.   We undermine the cause of freedom abroad when we restrict it here at home.

Americans are extraordinary ambassadors to the world. Read the rest of this entry »

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Monday, June 1, 2009

NYT: Cuba open to repairing U.S. relations

Cuba is showing signs of willingness to repair relations with the United States, according to the New York Times. The newspaper reports that Havana says it’s ready to resume talks on migration issues; negotiate direct postal service; and cooperate on counterterrorism, drug trafficking and hurricane relief efforts.

“Greater connections,” Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told the New York Times, “can lead to a better, freer future for the Cuban people. These talks are in the interest of the United States, and they are also in the interest of the Cuban people.” Read the full story

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

OpenCuba.org endorsements roll in

Orbitz launched OpenCuba.org to give voice to the majority of Americans who believe that all U.S. citizens should have the right to travel wherever they choose. Already thousands have signed the petition urging U.S. leaders to end the 50-year Cuba travel ban and give all Americans the freedom to travel to Cuba.

This position has resonated strongly with Cuban American groups, non-governmental organizations and other travel industry participants. We are proud to announce the endorsements of OpenCuba.org by the following organizations:

 
If your organization wants to endorse the campaign, email our vice president of government affairs, Brian Hoyt, at bhoyt@orbitz.com.

Please sign the petition and email 5 of your friends about it too.

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