Morning Star.png

 

 

An Affront to National Sovereignty

 

Co-op Bank admits that closure of Cuba Solidarity Campaign bank account is
only due to US blockade

 

 

Rob Miller, Cuba Solidarity Campaign, Morning Star, London, 8 June 2016

 

In November 2015 the Co-operative Bank closed the bank accounts of the Cuba
Solidarity Campaign (CSC), citing changing "risk appetite" and "global
regulations" among the reasons.

 

Now, following a huge campaign by CSC members and affiliates, the bank's
chief executive Niall Booker has finally confirmed in writing that the
closure was directly due to "risk" arising from the sanctions imposed by the
US government.

 

This is one of the first times a major corporation has admitted acting as a
result of US extraterritorial anti-Cuban blockade legislation.

 

This means that a British-based bank with a strong "ethical" tradition has
closed the accounts of a British-based NGO purely due to an illegal blockade
against a small Caribbean island implemented and enforced by the United
States.

 

By adhering to US sanctions, the Co-operative Bank is complying with US
extraterritorial legislation - something that is supposedly illegal under
British and EU legislation.

 

CSC has written to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Department of
Trade and Industry to ask that they make urgent representations to the US
government and to the Co-operative Bank to ensure British individuals and
companies are free to work with Cuba without being sanctioned by US blockade
policies. 

 

The British government should enforce the existing "Protection of Trading
Interests" legislation that is designed to ensure that British companies and
banks do not carry out US blockade policies and enable them to carry out
normal trade and relations between Britain and Cuba.

 

The all-party parliamentary group on Cuba (APPG) has also taken action on
the issue and written directly to the British government.

 

APPG chair Cat Smith MP said: "It cannot be right that this UK-based
organisation (CSC) should be penalised due to United States' blockade
policies when the organisation is doing nothing more than promoting better
UK-Cuba relations in accord with UK government policies."

 

Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond visited Cuba recently and signed a number
of deals to promote bilateral trade and exchange.

 

At the time of the visit, Granma, the Cuban national daily paper, cited the
CSC bank closure as another example of the extraterritorial character of the
blockade.

 

This led former government trade minister Brian Wilson to criticise the
Co-operative Bank for undermining the visit and causing "serious damage" to
British business interests on the island.

 

Wilson said: "Although this [bank closure] happened last November, the story
has flared up again because it was raised by the Cuban delegation to the
United Nations as an example of how extraterritorial actions dictated by the
United States are continuing to be implemented illegally.

 

"The Cubans cited the confirmation given by Niall Booker, chief executive of
the Co-op bank, that they closed the CSC accounts because they feared
reprisals by the United States Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)."

 

Wilson said: "Philip Hammond came here in good faith to build bridges with
Cuba but that work is being undermined by banks and other companies living
in fear of US reprisals, which are still very much alive.

 

"I hope the UK government will give the strongest possible signal of support
for any British company which fears sanctions by the United States. This is
a case of Washington acting as a global bully and the UK should not be seen
as complicit in that behaviour."

 

In 1992 and 1996, legislation was passed in the US Congress to strengthen
the extraterritorial parts of the blockade.

 

The Torricelli Law (1992) made it illegal for US-owned subsidiaries in third
countries to trade with Cuba and the Helms-Burton Act (1996) made foreign
investment in some Cuban companies liable to prosecution in the US.

 

Britain and the EU opposed these laws and in 1996 the European Council
introduced regulation EC2271/96 (the "EU blocking statute") to offer
protection to EU individuals and companies against certain specific
extraterritorial legislation, including the Helms-Burton Act.

 

The British government also passed its own "antidote" legislation,
Protection of Trading Interests, in 1996. However, although this order
remains on the statute books it has never been invoked.

 

In 2007 Austria's fifth-largest bank, BAWAG, reversed a decision to close
the bank accounts of 100 Cuban customers after the Austrian government
threatened to charge the bank for violating EU laws.

 

In a statement to the Austrian parliament the then foreign minister Ursula
Plassnik said: "US law is not applicable in Austria. We are not the 51st of
the United States."

 

The Co-operative Bank is one of the oldest banks in Britain with roots going
back to its establishment in Rochdale in 1872.

 

This issue is therefore one of British independence and sovereignty in so
much as US law is affecting a British-based bank and British-based
organisations carrying out perfectly legal activities in this country.

 

The fact that such a historic and proudly independent British institution,
renowned for its ethical banking, has been forced to adopt US-imposed
policies is an affront to us all.

 

In the light of the recent rapprochement between the US and Cuba, it is
ludicrous that the US government is still disrupting foreign companies and
organisations from having normal business and banking relations with Cuba.

 

CSC believes that the British government should uphold its own sovereign
laws above those of the US and defend British interests; it should make
representations to the US government to remove the threat of fines toward
foreign companies that trade with Cuba and invoke existing British
legislation to prevent British companies from complying with US
extraterritorial legislation.

 

This would send a clear signal to other banks and companies facing similar
dilemmas over their "risk appetite" that British laws are sovereign and that
British-Cuban trade is being supported.

 

The issue of the Co-op account closure has been raised at the United
Nations, as well as parliaments in London, Dublin and Edinburgh.

 

Elaine Smith MSP, who submitted the motion to Holyrood, said: "At a time
when the United States itself is beginning to engage with Cuba, it is absurd
that the Co-op Bank is closing the accounts of customers here who want to
trade with the island. The Scottish people have so much in common with the
people of Cuba and it is wonderful to see so many initiatives develop
between our countries particularly in cultural exchange and trade. Any
attempts to block such links must be fought against."

 

.    Rob Miller is director of CSC.

 

.    The Co-op Bank account closure and the impact of the ongoing US
blockade will be discussed at Cuban Futures: Roundtable discussion with
Cuban ambasador Teresita Vicente, plus Cuba specialists Dr Steve Ludlam, Dr
Francisco Dominguez and Lauren Collins on Saturday June 11 at 2.30pm,
Hamilton House, Mabledon Place, London WC1H as part of the all-day CSC
annual general meeting, free and open to all. For further details, phone
(020) 7490-5715 or visit www.cuba-solidarity.org.uk. 

 

 

From:
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-6d81-An-affront-to-our-sovereignty#.V1e
Xcfl9600

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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