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Cuba

UT Academic Leaders to Travel to Cuba to Build Educational Partnerships

Posted on February 12, 2018

The University of Tampa has been selected as one of 10 schools in the U.S. by the Institute of International Education (IIE) to participate in the binannual Congreso Universidad Cuban International Education Conference.

As part of the program, David Stern, UT’s provost; Marca Bear, associate dean of international programs; Frank Ghannadian, dean of the Sykes College of Business; David Gudelunas, dean of the College of Arts and Letters; Jack Geller, dean of the College of Social Sciences, Mathematics and Education; and Paul Greenwood, dean of the College of Natural and Health Sciences, will travel to Havana Feb. 11–17.

“Engaging in academic and cultural exchange with institutions of higher education in Cuba deepens Tampa’s international heritage that is a unique part of our community’s history,” said Stern.

“This is a critical moment for academic cooperation between the United States and Cuba,” said Clare Overman, head of higher education initiatives at IIE. “We firmly believe in the opportunity to expand bi-lateral exchange. This delegation aims to foster and explore those opportunities for academic collaboration despite challenges.”

At the Congreso Universidad, U.S. representatives will meet with their Cuban counterparts, opening opportunities for future academic partnerships and student exchanges between the two nations. IIE’s International Academic Partnership Program (IAPP) will lead the delegation.

Since current restrictions limit options for individual travel to Cuba from the United States, this trip represents a unique opportunity to foster educational exchanges and partnerships between the two countries. Moreover, Congreso Universidad will allow representatives of U.S. universities to connect with their counterparts in remote or difficult to access regions of Cuba.

The Cuban Ministry of Higher Eduation (MES) hosts the Congreso Universidad semi-annually, inviting delegations from Latin America and the world to meet with higher education officials from Cuba.

UT previously attended Congreso Universidad in 2015, which led to the University being named the first U.S. affiliate of the Center for Martí Studies in April 2016.

In May 2016, UT offered two travel courses to Cuba: Government and World Affairs 353: Cuba and the U.S., and Communication 224: Mass Media and Society. In October 2016, seven UT faculty presented research papers during the UNICA Conference, organized by the University of Ciego de Avila in Cuba.

For more information, contact Lisa Shemon, coordinator of international programs education and outreach, at [email protected] or (813) 258-7431.

Filed Under: Education, Featured Tagged With: Cuba, Educational Partnerships, University of Tampa

Sen. Bill Nelson statement on Cuba sonic attacks

Posted on September 29, 2017

Following is a statement from U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) on the State Department’s response today to continued acoustic attacks on U.S. personnel in Cuba. Nelson spoke today with State Department officials about the response:
“The fact that the Cuban government isn’t protecting the health and wellbeing of our U.S. Embassy personnel is inexcusable. With the loss of hearing and stroke-like-symptoms, the Cuban government owes an explanation and reparations to the families of those injured and must work to ensure these attacks cease immediately. In the meantime, the Cuban Embassy’s staff in Washington, D.C. should be reduced by the same proportionate number of U.S. personnel recalled.”

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Cuba, Sen. Bill Nelson, sonic attacks

Port Tampa Bay Announces Five Additional Cruises to Havana, Cuba in 2018

Posted on August 17, 2017

Following strong response to its first-ever cruises to Cuba announced earlier this year, Carnival Cruise Line has added five more voyages from Port Tampa Bay featuring extended calls in Havana in 2018.
The new voyages include three five-day cruises to Havana and Cozumel or Key West departing Feb. 17, July 2 and Sept. 5, 2018; a six-day sailing featuring Havana and Grand Cayman departing Aug. 26, 2018; and an eight-day voyage with stops at Havana, Grand Cayman and Cozumel departing Aug. 18, 2018.
Earlier this year, Carnival announced a series of four and five-day voyages to Havana that kicked off in late June.  Upcoming voyages in the initial program include four-day cruises departing Aug. 24, Sept. 7 and 21, and Oct. 5 and 19, 2017 as well as May 3, 2018 and five-day voyages departing Aug. 28, Sept. 25 and Oct. 9, 2017.
The visits to Havana comply with regulations of the U.S. Department of Treasury that permit travel operators to transport approved travelers to Cuba to engage in activities as defined by the U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Foreign Assets Control.
About Port Tampa Bay
Port Tampa Bay is Florida’s largest port and the largest economic engine in west central Florida, supporting nearly 85,000 jobs and generating over $17 billion in annual economic impact. In addition to being a top 10 U.S. cruise port, the port handles a wide array of bulk, break bulk, containers and roll-on/roll-off cargoes, and is a major shipbuilding and repair center. Port Tampa Bay was honored as 2016 Best Port Operator by Lloyd’s List. For more information, visit www.portTB.com.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Cruises, Cuba, Havana, Port Tampa Bay

Mallea Praises Trump's Cuba Policy Changes

Posted on June 16, 2017

The HD 116 candidate calls out Daniel Perez for turning a blind eye to Cuban oppression.

Jose Mallea today made the following statement regarding the changes in U.S. policy toward Cuba announced by President Trump:
“President Trump has done the right thing today by beginning to roll back the anti-freedom Obama administration policies toward Cuba. As it has sadly been for decades, Cuba’s government remains a repressive, Communist, military regime.
“It is disappointing that so many Americans, including Daniel Perez, who benefit from the freedoms we enjoy in our beloved country, look the other way when it comes to our neighbors in Cuba. While Cubans continue to struggle economically and many suffer under serious human rights abuses, we must enact policies that will help reform the Castro government, not reward it.
“Any U.S. policy that normalizes Cuban oppression has to go, and I stand with President Trump in this good and important fight.”

Paid by Jose Mallea, Republican, for State Representative

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Cuba, Jose Mallea Campaign, Policy Changes

Gov. Scott: U.S. Must Take Stand Against Cuba and Venezuela

Posted on June 7, 2017

U.S. Must Take Stand Against Cuba and Venezuela
By, Governor Rick Scott
In recent months, we have seen Venezuela slip into complete chaos. Under the brutal and oppressive dictatorship of Nicolas Maduro, we have seen things go from bad to worse. Food and medicine shortages, violence on the streets and economic uncertainty.
We’ve also seen companies like General Motors, Bridgestone and General Mills scale back their operations in Venezuela. Recently, United Airlines also joined in this effort by announcing it will suspend flights to Venezuela next month.
It’s no wonder that these companies are pulling out of a country engulfed in violent political protests and economic chaos.
Venezuelans endure long lines to purchase basic necessities all while Maduro’s dictatorship blames companies for the country’s shortages. The Maduro regime continues to mismanage the country’s oil resources, has produced a swollen inflation rate and dismal exchange rate, leaving the Venezuelan people to deal with hardship and corruption.
This is not acceptable and we should not stand for these injustices to the Venezuelan people. The United States must stop doing business with Venezuela immediately.
The turmoil in Venezuela is eerily similar to events that have plagued the island nation of Cuba for decades. When President Obama moved to normalize relations with the Castro dictatorship many argued that the new relationship would be the beginning of a better life for the Cuban people. Yet two and half years later, repression is growing and the brutal crackdown of the peaceful opposition movement is most alarming.
This was the wrong move. A message must be sent to both the Maduro and Castro regimes and their gangs of thugs that the United States will not tolerate their continued aggressions.
Organizations like the Ladies in White and UNPACU are the constant targets of the Castro regime’s violent rage. The anticipated “emerging private sector” (cuentapropistas) has actually decreased and tens of thousands of Cubans have attempted to flee the enslaved island in numbers not seen since 1994. In Venezuela, the Castro dictatorship continues to pull the strings, aiding the Maduro government’s bloodbath against the heroic Venezuelan people.
Moreover, the Obama-Castro deal failed to prioritize America’s interests. It purposely did not contemplate the certified claims of American citizens whose properties were stolen by Castro’s regime; it allowed Cuba’s trafficking of 240 tons of missile technology and other heavy weaponry with North Korea, and those responsible for it, to get away without consequence; it allowed companies to put American workers at a competitive disadvantage through deals with Cuba’s state-owned entities, which employ forced and exploitative labor practices that are contrary to international norms; it ignored judicial claims of American victims of terrorism by Castro’s regime and the cries for justice from American families whose killers are being harbored by Castro’s regime. To add insult to injury, President Obama even commuted the life sentence of a Cuban spy that was convicted of conspiracy in the murder of three American citizens.
The approach for the new United States-Cuba policy should be a substantive shift. The current direction has proven to provide the Cuban military and state security the resources that will enable them to transfer power from one family member to another. The new course must be focused on doing our part so that the Cuban people may regain their right to self-determination.
Today, I am encouraging President Trump to take a stand against these brutal dictatorships. President Trump and his Administration have the opportunity to set a new course. One that recognizes that the Cuban and Venezuelan people deserve to be free, and prioritizes human rights, democracy, security and the rule of law. This new course should serve as a beacon of hope for those brave activists in Cuba and Venezuela by making it clear that, if you are a Castro or Maduro government official involved in the violation of human rights, you will be prohibited from obtaining any immigrant or non-immigrant visa to the United States. I’m convinced that this new direction will better serve U.S. interests, generate genuine economic prosperity and help the Cuban and Venezuelan people achieve their long-awaited freedom.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Cuba, Governor Rick Scott, venezuela

Mallea Campaign Highlights Perez Support for Obama Policies on Cuba

Posted on June 2, 2017


The Jose Mallea Campaign today released a Spanish-language video exposing Daniel Perez’s support for Obama-Castro Cuba policy, which allows travel to Cuba for specific purposes and also softened regulation on business and trade with the island dictatorship. The video features glamorous photos of Perez and his fiancée in Cuba, taking advantage of Obama’s relaxed stance toward oppression while millions continue to suffer nearby under the Castro regime. The Miami Herald recently published the photos.
“The residents of House District 116 deserve to know the truth about the candidates in this race,” said Mallea. “Because voters deserve transparency, we call on Mr. Perez to produce all travel and visa documents, pictures, videos, and other related material related to his 2016 Cuba trip in order for residents of House District 116 to be able to judge for themselves what a candidate who claims to be against the Obama-Cuba travel policy was doing in Cuba.
“These photos reveal either ignorance or callous indifference to the decades of suffering the people of Cuba have endured and continue to endure today. Neither is acceptable in our community’s next representative in Tallahassee. House District 116 deserves a champion for freedom, not someone who will enable a murderous dictatorship. I will always stand on the side of liberty.”
To view the video, please click here.

Paid by Jose Mallea, Republican, for State Representative

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Cuba, Jose Mallea Campaign, Obama Policies

Gov. Scott: We Need a Cuba Policy That Respects Fundamental Desire of Cuban People to Be Free

Posted on January 13, 2017

Governor Rick Scott issued the following statement today regarding the Obama Administration’s announcement yesterday on ending the “Wet Foot, Dry Foot” policy.
Governor Rick Scott said, “President Obama’s Cuba policy can be summed up this way: he has legitimized and coddled a bloodthirsty dictator and in the process, he has turned his back on those who have fought so hard for a free Cuba.
“As we sit here right now, people in Cuba are being persecuted and killed for their faith, for supporting democracy, for expressing their political views, and for simply desiring freedom.
“With the President’s latest move, it appears that he has consulted and negotiated with a foreign tyrant while completely ignoring the United States Congress. We have a number of great members of Congress in our Florida delegation of Cuban descent, but of course the President did not involve them in his decision-making.
“Obama’s polices have not improved human rights in Cuba. In fact, things may be getting worse. We believe that the murderous regime made about 10,000 political arrests last year. Just this week, pro-democracy leader Dr. Oscar Biscet was arrested. Obama has betrayed America’s long-standing commitment to human rights and freedom in Cuba. We need a Cuba policy that respects the fundamental desire of the Cuban people to be free.”

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Cuba, Fundamental Desire, Gov. Rick Scott, Policy, Wet Foot Dry Foot

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