February 1, 1999

Dear Colleague,

Global Exchange, the nonprofit internationalist organization based
in San Francisco, California, has organized educational tours to
the developing world for the past ten years.  Our very popular
Cuba tours have focused on every aspect of Cuban society (art and
culture, religion, education, women's issues, economic and 
environmental
issues and public health, to name but a few.)  We are probably the 
second
largest provider of travel services to Cuba in the U.S. and our trips have
spawned many activists and organizations now working to end the U.S.
embargo of Cuba.

In September of this year, Global Exchange received a "cease and 
desist"
order from the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) at the Treasury
Department, ordering us to stop organizing travel to Cuba for U.S.
citizens and to provide the names of all participants on such trips since 
March 1996.  Global Exchange will not comply with this order.  

The mission of Global Exchange is to build people to people ties 
between
the U.S. and the developing world. It is our view that ordinary U.S.
citizens have not only a right, but a responsibility to inform themselves
as fully as possible of the realities of other nations and cultures,
especially those with which the U.S. government may have a conflictive
relationship, as is the case with Cuba. A commitment to the 
development of
a better informed and more active citizenry is a major goal of Global
Exchange.  

This latest Treasury Department action against us -- based on an overly
broad interpretation of the archaic 1919 Trading with the Enemy Act 
and an
overly narrow interpretation of the travel restrictions themselves-- is
but one in a long history of outrageous infringements on the right of 
U.S.
citizens to travel.  These violations of an internationally recognized
human right, committed by a government that repeatedly holds itself up 
as
a model of democracy and human rights, must be resisted. 

We at Global Exchange view the cease and desist order as a
significant threat but also an incredible opportunity. We have
begun the complicated task of putting all of the pieces together
for a major struggle with OFAC.  We have garnered the legal support
of the Center for Constitutional Rights. We have formally requested
a meeting with the Treasury Department to discuss our now four year old
application to be licensed as a Cuba travel service provider.  

Global Exchange is one of the best suited organizations in the
country to qualify for a Cuba travel providers license.  Each of
our trips has a "clearly defined educational purpose," which is a
category of licensable travel according to OFAC's own regulations.
We have submitted numerous license requests to OFAC in the past several
years, to no avail. Typically, we do not even receive a response, as in
the case of the Travel Service Providers license we applied for in 1994. 
Given our history of challenging the travel restrictions, from
spearheading the Freedom to Travel Campaign to our ultimately unsuccessful
lawsuit against OFAC in 1994-95, we have clearly been the victim of OFAC's
discriminatory practices.

Global Exchange has taken over 5,000 people to Cuba in the last
10 years, with the number of delegations increasing each year.
In 1999, despite the obstacles OFAC has thrown in our way, we
will organize over 20 tours to Cuba.  The trips contribute to
the development of a significant constituency of highly committed people
working to end the embargo.  Our past trip participants include Ann
Bardach, whose New York Times  exposé on links between the Cuban American
National Foundation and exile terrorist Luis Posada made headlines across
the U.S. this summer; Delvis Fernandez Levy, founder of the Cuban American
Alliance and an increasingly important moderate exile voice on the Cuba
question; and A.W. Claussen, former President of the World Bank and
current member of Americans for Humanitarian Trade.  On a lighter note, we
are the fiscal sponsor for the highly successful Send a Piana to Havana
Campaign of Benjamin Treuhaft, who first visited Cuba on one of our tours.

As one of the most well-known and widely respected providers of
educational travel to Cuba, we must defend ourselves from this
frontal assault on our work. We will use this opportunity to draw
national attention to the travel restrictions and hopefully build
the support necessary to effect their demise.  As we build our case with
Treasury on the right of ordinary citizens to travel, we need to have the
support of the organizations, progressive and mainstream, that supported
our Freedom to Travel Campaign and lawsuit during 1993-1996.  We hope that
you and your organization will be in a position to assist us again on this
all important issue.  

It is imperative that we act immediately as the Administration is
currently reviewing the travel regulations and intends to make its
changes -- if any -- before the middle of February.  

See the Urgent Action Alert! below.

In peace,

Medea Benjamin                          Pam Montanaro
Co Director                             Cuba Program Coordinator

URGENT ACTION ALERT!

Please support Global Exchange at this time by either:

(1) signing on to the sample letter below; 
(Please fax the signatures to 415-255-7498
attention: Pam Montanaro, 
or simply email the names of the signatories to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

(2) or faxing your own version of the letter below directly to Secretary
Rubin at the Treasury Department (fax 202-622-0073) with cc's to: Michael
Ranneberger Cuba Desk in the Department of State fax 202-736-4476

and

Steven Pinter
OFAC
fax 202-622-1657

(Please fax us a copy of your letter as well.)

We would appreciate the letter being signed by both the Latin America or
human rights staff person of your organization and your executive
director.

(3.) Please alert your congressperson and senators of this struggle and of
your desire to see the travel restrictions lifted.  As an intermediary
step, the Treasury Department should broaden the definition of "clearly
defined educational travel" so that nonprofit internationalist
organizations like Global Exchange can legally organize educational trips
to Cuba for the general public.

We welcome your suggestions and advice for avenues to pursue and
potential new allies in this struggle for the right to travel.  


Sample Letter

Secretary Robert Rubin
Department of the Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, D.C. 20220

Dear Secretary Rubin,

It has come to our attention that the Office of Foreign Assets
Control has imposed a "cease and desist" order on the internationalist,
nonprofit organization Global Exchange regarding their educational trips
to Cuba.  Global Exchange is one of the most qualified organizations in
the U.S. seeking to provide opportunities for ordinary U.S. citizens to
learn about Cuba for themselves in the context of a socially responsible
and educational tour.

Please intervene in this matter on behalf of Global Exchange and
the internationally recognized human right of citizens to travel.
It is imperative in this increasingly interconnected world, that
human beings have the right to communicate across borders.  How
can citizens credibly enter the  debate on such a controversial
U.S. foreign policy if they are not allowed to experience first
hand the reality of the foreign nation in question?  

Global Exchange is widely respected for its mission to build people
to people ties between the U.S. and the developing world.  For the past
ten years, they have taken thousands of citizens to other nations to meet
with a variety of foreign citizens and organizations in order to better
understand their flobal neighbors.  Certainly this is an activity that
should be encouraged and supported by the U.S. government.

We would like the Administration to work with Congress to lift all
restrictions on travel by U.S. citizens as soon as possible.  The
Freedom to Travel bills introduced in the last two sessions of Congress by
Senator Simon (104th) and Representative Serrano (105th)  provide good
models for what U.S. policy should be on this issue.  

In the interim, it is imperative that the Treasury Department
broaden its interpretation of the current restrictions,
particularly in the area of "clearly defined educational travel"
to include ordinary citizens who seek a better understanding of
their world through educational tours.  

OFAC should immediately remove its cease and desist order against Global
Exchange and grant that admirable organization a travel providers license
so that they can continue to educate U.S. citizens about Cuban society and
to build the kind of people to people ties that will promote long term
peace and understanding between the U.S. and Cuba.

Sincerely,

Your name(s) and organization here

cc:
Michael Ranneburger                                     
Office of Cuba Affairs                  
Department of State             
2201 C Street, NW                       
Washington, D.C. 20520

Steven Pinter
Office of Foreign Assets Control
1500 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, D.C. 20520

Fulton Armstrong
Inter-American Affairs
National Security Council
1600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW
Washington, D.C. 20500
-------------------------------------
Global Exchange
2017 Mission St., Rm. 303
San Francisco, CA 94110
Phone: 415.255.7296 Fax: 415.255.7498
 http://www.globalexchange.org



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