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U.S.
Orders 14 Cuban Diplomats Expelled
By Edith M. Lederer, Associated Press
Writer. Tue May 13,12:01
PM ET
UNITED NATIONS - The United States has
ordered the expulsions of 14 Cuban
diplomats — seven at the United Nations and
seven in
Washington
— for engaging in intelligence activities
outside their official duties, U.S.
officials said Tuesday.
The seven Cubans at the U.N. Mission in New
York
are being expelled "for engaging in
activities deemed harmful to the
United States outside their official
capacity," a U.S. official said, using
diplomatic language for spying.
"These activities constitute an abuse of
their privileges of residence," the
official said on condition of anonymity.
No time frame was given for their
departures,
U.S.
officials said.
In Washington, a State Department spokesman
said seven diplomats in the Cuban Interests
Section there were declared "persona non
grata" because of "intelligence activities
incompatible with their diplomatic status."
The Washington diplomats were given 10 days
to leave the country, U.S. officials said.
In Havana, officials at Cuba's Foreign
Ministry did not immediately respond to
requests for comment.
The identities of the diplomats ordered to
leave were not immediately released. The
State Department said the head of the Cuban
Interests Section, Dagoberto Rodriguez, was
not among those expelled.
A letter ordering the seven U.N.-based
diplomats to leave was delivered to the
Cuban Mission in midtown Manhattan on Monday
evening, the official said. It did not give
them any time frame to depart.
The latest U.N. directory lists 37
accredited Cuban diplomats, led by
Ambassador Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla. The
names of those ordered expelled were not
released.
Cuba's U.N. Mission said Rodriguez Parrilla
was traveling and "we don't have any
comments in this regard."
The Bush administration and Cuban
authorities have engaged in an escalating
diplomatic tit-for-tat reminiscent of the
Cold War days in U.S.-Cuban relations.
Until Tuesday, this involved more mundane
issues like fixing embassy plumbing.
Last month, the United States walked out of
a U.N. meeting to protest
Cuba's
re-election to the Human Rights Commission,
calling it "an outrage" that undermined the
group's credibility.
Cuba's uncontested election to the
Geneva-based commission came weeks after
Fidel Castro's government sent 78
independent journalists, librarians and
opposition leaders to prison for lengthy
terms and executed three alleged hijackers
trying to get to the United States.
"It was an outrage for us because we view
Cuba
as the worst violator of human rights in
this hemisphere," Sichan Siv, the
U.S.
ambassador to the U.N. Economic and Social
Council, said at the time.
Two months ago, Cuba clamped down on travel
by American diplomats, demanding that each
trip beyond a specified area around
metropolitan Havana be approved. Before,
the only requirement was that Cuban
authorities be notified of such trips
beforehand.
The State Department immediately responded
by imposing the same condition on travel by
Washington-based Cubans.
The Cuban measure apparently was triggered
by
Havana's
unease over the travels of the chief U.S.
diplomat there, James Cason. He logged an
estimated 6,200 miles motoring around the
island, sometimes meeting with dissidents.
Cuban President Fidel Castro saw these
contacts as subversive and used them partly
as an excuse for his March crackdown on 75
dissidents, many of whom were described by
the government as traitors. All were
sentenced to lengthy prison after brief
trials.
The State Department defended Cason's
travels, saying he was seeking a peaceful
transition to democracy on the island. It
rejected Cuban allegations that
U.S.
diplomats have provided money to dissidents.
In March, Washington dropped a Clinton-era
"people-to-people" policy aimed at
increasing contacts between ordinary
Americans and Cubans. Under the policy, the
U.S. government granted licenses to
academics, athletes, scientists and others
to travel to
Cuba
for exchange programs.
The Treasury Department is accepting public
comments on the new restrictions until May
23 before the final rules are issued.
Associated Press writer George Gedda in
Washington contributed to this report.
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