U.S.,
Cuba to negotiate billions in claims against each other
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[December 08, 2015]
By Daniel Trotta
HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuban and U.S.
officials on Tuesday will begin to untangle one of the most complex
obstacles to normalization of relations between the two countries: the
claims of Americans whose property was nationalized after the 1959
revolution and Cuban counterclaims for damages caused by the U.S. trade
embargo.
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The talks in Havana are the latest in a series of bilateral
meetings since the two former Cold War adversaries restored
diplomatic ties in July this year.
Some 5,913 U.S. corporations and individuals have been awarded $1.9
billion worth of claims for factories, farms, homes and other assets
that were nationalized in Cuba after Fidel Castro's rebels came to
power on Jan. 1, 1959.
Those claims, registered with the U.S. Justice Department's Foreign
Claims Settlement Commission, are now worth roughly $8 billion when
including 6.0 percent annual interest.
Cuban law ties the settlement of the claims to U.S. reparations for
damages resulting from the embargo and other acts of U.S. aggression
against Cuba. Cuban estimates of that damage range from $121 billion
to more than $300 billion.
Neither side is eager to pay the full value, setting up a
negotiation.
"The meeting is the first step in what we expect to be a long and
complex process, but the United States views the resolution of
outstanding claims as a top priority for normalization," the U.S.
State Department said in a statement on Monday.
Cuba nationalized all foreign businesses and reached settlements
with owners from other countries. The government recognizes the U.S.
claims but it cut off negotiations in response to the decision by
former President Dwight Eisenhower to suspend Cuba's sugar quota in
1960. The claims sat dormant for half a century as a result of the
U.S.-Cuba estrangement, which ended a year a ago when U.S. President
Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro announced detente.
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Many of the nationalized companies no longer exist and individual
claims have been passed to heirs.
The largest claim, by the Cuban Electric Company for more than $267
million, has changed hands several times due to mergers and
acquisitions and is held by Office Depot, itself a takeover target
of Staples Inc pending antitrust review.
With interest that claim is now worth more than $1 billion.
Other major claimants include Starwood Hotels, Coca-Cola, the former
International Telephone & Telegraph Co., now ITT Corp, and various
oil, sugar and financial interests.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta)
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