The
new 50-50 venture, Ron Santiago SA, will have exclusive
international rights to the premium brand, considered the best
by local residents along with Havana Club, which is marketed by
French firm Pernod Ricard <PERP.PA> under a similar arrangement
signed in the 1990s.
The agreement comes at a time when the United States is ramping
up sanctions on Cuba and trying to thwart foreign investment
there.
The Trump administration in May allowed Title III of the 1996
Helms Burton Act to take effect, enabling U.S. citizens to bring
lawsuits against foreign companies profiting from property taken
from them after Cuba’s 1959 revolution. It had been suspended by
President Donald Trump’s predecessors.
The Santiago distillery and related properties were reportedly
nationalized.
Cuban rum is banned in the United States, but popular throughout
Europe and other parts of the world.
"Cuban rum represents 9 percent of retail sales of premium rum
worldwide," a news release from the new company said.
Regarding the implementation of the long-dormant section of the
Helms-Burton Act, Luca Cesarano, general director of the new
joint venture, said he was confident the company would not be
affected.
Cesarano said a subsidiary of Diageo with no ties to the United
States was the partner and no company personnel who work with or
in the United States were involved in the project or would be in
the future.
"Neither the subsidiary of Diageo which is the partner, nor the
venture, will interact with any Diageo entity or person that
interacts with the United States," he said at a Havana news
conference.
(Reporting by Marc Frank; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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