BY CHARLIE FRAGO
Posted on Saturday, July 25, 2009
Gov. Mike Beebe will headline a group of lawmakers, economic development 
officials and business leaders seeking to sow seeds for future Arkansas 
agricultural exports to Cuba in a three-day trip next week.
Cuba has been under a U.S. trade embargo since October 1960, shortly 
after Fidel Castro took power there and months before he declared 
communist rule. But, Beebe noted in a news release, "there are now 
indications that these trade embargoes may soon be eased further or 
lifted completely."
Beebe, along with fellow Democrats state Sen. Jim Luker of Wynne and 
Rep. Robert Moore of Arkansas City, are to leave Tuesday for Havana to 
meet with Cuban trade officials. Morril Harriman, the governor's chief 
of staff; Maria Haley, executive director of the Arkansas Economic 
Development Commission; and officials with Riceland Foods Inc. and Tyson 
Foods Inc. are also to go on the trip.
Before returning Thursday, Beebe plans to lay the founda- tion for new 
export markets for rice, chicken and other agricultural products if the 
embargo eases or disappears, said Matt DeCample, Beebe's spokesman.
Cuba will be Beebe's first official trip outside the United States, 
DeCample said.
Riceland Foods officials will play an important role during the trip 
because they have the most experience with the Cuban government, he said.
Moore has said the embargo has hurt his district in southeast Arkansas, 
a center of rice cultivation.
"I think the general sentiment of the folks I represent and my own 
personal political beliefs is that 50 years of embargo have not been 
successful," Moore said.
The trip will be a good chance to "establish better relations" with 
Cuban trade officials, Moore said.
"It's a neighbor so close that we've had such a cold relationship with," 
he said. "In my experience that's not the way to go about doing things."
Luker said the seven counties in his Senate district rely economically 
on rice and other agricultural products.
"It's a bread-and-butter issue," he said, adding that the embargo has 
outlived its usefulness. "Any rationale for it has long since gone away."
As a potential "emerging market," Joe Holmes, marketing director for the 
Economic Development Commission, said Cuba could be an important trade 
partner.
If the embargo is lifted or further eased, Holmes said, "We'll know who 
to talk to."
Cuba, population 11.4 million, has a per-capita gross domestic product 
of $9,500 a year, about $900 below the world average, according to 2008 
statistics in "The CIA World Factbook."
Congress loosened rules on agricultural exports in 2000, but former 
President George W. Bush by an executive order tightened them again in 
2005, requiring that shippers be paid cash or through third-country 
banks in advance before trading with Cuba. That rule has restrained 
agricultural exports, say many political leaders in the South.
DeCample said he didn't know Arkansas' share of rice and poultry 
exports, but that U.S. rice trade had significantly declined since the 
2005 restrictions while poultry exports continued to climb.
All but one state that borders the Gulf of Mexico supports easing trade 
rules with Cuba, as reported by the Los Angeles Times in May. The 
exception is Florida, home to a large population of Cuban-Americans, 
historically opposed to any relations with Cuba as long as it remains 
communist.
Arkansas congressional Democrats Marion Berry and Vic Snyder, who have 
visited the island, have called for an end to the embargo. Sen. Blanche 
Lincoln, also a Democrat, has criticized the restrictions and advocates 
greater trade with Cuba. Democrat Mark Pryor, the state's junior U.S. 
senator, also voiced support for greater trade.
U.S. Reps. Mike Ross, a Democrat, and John Boozman, a Republican, didn't 
return phone calls Friday requesting comment.
In April, President Barack Obama relaxed restrictions on family travel 
to Cuba and eased limits on money sent to family members there.
The state will pay for Beebe and Harriman to make the trip, DeCample 
said. The estimated cost is $4,100 total, he said.
Haley's trip will be funded by the Economic Development Commission, 
Holmes said.
Moore and Luker said they will pay their own way, if necessary, but 
might be reimbursed by the state Department of Agriculture.
No meetings are scheduled with Fidel or Raul Castro, De-Cample said. 
Raul Castro assumed power after Fidel stepped down in 2008 because of 
illness.
But Moore remained hopeful Friday of a meeting with one or both Castros.
"That would be a real nice sidebar to the trip," he said.
NWAnews.com :: Northwest Arkansas' News Source (25 July 2009)
http://www.nwanews.com/adg/News/265137/
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