US officials meet Cuba’s Raul Castro
BY Agencies21 Feb 2013 8:01 AM IST
Agencies21 Feb 2013 8:01 AM IST
US lawmakers have met with President Raul Castro and other senior Cuban officials and were told they would be given access to an American imprisoned in Havana. The State Department said the legislators would push for his release.
Cuban state-television showed the delegation, led by Senator Patrick Leahy, chatting with Castro at the Palace of the Revolution yesterday. It said only that the two sides discussed ‘issues of mutual interest.’
American diplomats on the island could not immediately be reached for comment.
In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the congressional delegation, five senators and two representatives, would meet with jailed American Alan Gross and seek his immediate release.
Gross’s detention has become the chief impediment to improved relations between Washington and Havana. The 63-year-old was arrested in 2009, when he was caught bringing sensitive communications equipment into Cuba during a USAID democracy-building program. He was sentenced to 15 years.
The State Department looks ‘forward to the results of their diplomacy on his behalf and, more broadly, with regard to all of our concerns about Cuba, human rights and other things,’ Nuland said.
Leahy has said he would be thrilled to bring Gross home with him, but added that it was extremely unlikely to happen.
The Vermont Democrat led a similar trip a year ago, meeting with both Gross and Castro.
Cuban state-television showed the delegation, led by Senator Patrick Leahy, chatting with Castro at the Palace of the Revolution yesterday. It said only that the two sides discussed ‘issues of mutual interest.’
American diplomats on the island could not immediately be reached for comment.
In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the congressional delegation, five senators and two representatives, would meet with jailed American Alan Gross and seek his immediate release.
Gross’s detention has become the chief impediment to improved relations between Washington and Havana. The 63-year-old was arrested in 2009, when he was caught bringing sensitive communications equipment into Cuba during a USAID democracy-building program. He was sentenced to 15 years.
The State Department looks ‘forward to the results of their diplomacy on his behalf and, more broadly, with regard to all of our concerns about Cuba, human rights and other things,’ Nuland said.
Leahy has said he would be thrilled to bring Gross home with him, but added that it was extremely unlikely to happen.
The Vermont Democrat led a similar trip a year ago, meeting with both Gross and Castro.
Next Story



