P.L. 104-114
March 12, 1996
Helms-Burton Act
Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (Libertad) Act of 1996
An Act
To seek international sanctions against the Castro
government in Cuba, to plan for support of a transition government leading
to a democratically elected government in Cuba, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE; TABLE OF CONTENTS.
(a) Short Title.--This Act may be cited as the
"Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (Libertad) Act of 1996".
(b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents
of this Act is as follows:
Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents.
Sec. 2. Findings.
Sec. 3. Purposes.
Sec. 4. Definitions.
Sec. 5. Severability.
TITLE I--STRENGTHENING INTERNATIONAL SANCTIONS
AGAINST THE CASTRO GOVERNMENT
Sec. 101. Statement of policy.
Sec. 102. Enforcement of the economic embargo
of Cuba.
Sec. 103. Prohibition against indirect financing
of Cuba.
Sec. 104. United States opposition to Cuban membership
in international financial institutions.
Sec. 105. United States opposition to termination
of the suspension of the Cuban Government from participation in the Organization
of American States.
Sec. 106. Assistance by the independent states
of the former Soviet Union for the Cuban Government.
Sec. 107. Television broadcasting to Cuba.
Sec. 108. Reports on commerce with, and assistance
to, Cuba from other foreign countries.
Sec. 109. Authorization of support for democratic
and human rights groups and international observers.
Sec. 110. Importation safeguard against certain
Cuban products.
Sec. 111. Withholding of foreign assistance from
countries supporting Juragua nuclear plant in Cuba.
Sec. 112. Reinstitution of family remittances
and travel to Cuba.
Sec. 113. Expulsion of criminals from Cuba.
Sec. 114. News bureaus in Cuba.
Sec. 115. Effect of Act on lawful United States
Government activities.
Sec. 116. Condemnation of Cuban attack on American
aircraft.
TITLE II--ASSISTANCE TO A FREE AND INDEPENDENT
CUBA
Sec. 201. Policy toward a transition government
and a democratically elected government in Cuba.
Sec. 202. Assistance for the Cuban people.
Sec. 203. Coordination of assistance program;
implementation and reports to Congress; reprogramming.
Sec. 204. Termination of the economic embargo
of Cuba.
Sec. 205. Requirements and factors for determining
a transition government.
Sec. 206. Requirements for determining a democratically
elected government.
Sec. 207. Settlement of outstanding United States
claims to confiscated property in Cuba.
TITLE III--PROTECTION OF PROPERTY RIGHTS OF UNITED
STATES NATIONALS
Sec. 301. Findings.
Sec. 302. Liability for trafficking in confiscated
property claimed by United States nationals.
Sec. 303. Proof of ownership of claims to confiscated
property.
Sec. 304. Exclusivity of Foreign Claims Settlement
Commission certification procedure.
Sec. 305. Limitation of actions.
Sec. 306. Effective date.
TITLE IV--EXCLUSION OF CERTAIN ALIENS
Sec. 401. Exclusion from the United States of
aliens who have confiscated property of United States nationals or who
traffic in such property.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
The Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The economy of Cuba has experienced
a decline of at least 60 percent in the last 5 years as a result of--
(A) the end of its subsidization by the
former Soviet Union of between 5 billion and 6 billion dollars annually;
(B) 36 years of communist tyranny and economic
mismanagement by the Castro government;
(C) the extreme decline in trade between
Cuba and the countries of the former Soviet bloc; and
(D) the stated policy of the Russian Government
and the countries of the former Soviet bloc to conduct economic relations
with Cuba on strictly commercial terms.
(2) At the same time, the welfare and health
of the Cuban people have substantially deteriorated as a result of this
economic decline and the refusal of the Castro regime to permit free and
fair democratic elections in Cuba.
(3) The Castro regime has made it abundantly
clear that it will not engage in any substantive political reforms that
would lead to democracy, a market economy, or an economic recovery.
(4) The repression of the Cuban people, including
a ban on free and fair democratic elections, and continuing violations of
fundamental human rights, have isolated the Cuban regime as the only completely
nondemocratic government in the Western Hemisphere.
(5) As long as free elections are not held
in Cuba, the economic condition of the country and the welfare of the Cuban
people will not improve in any significant way.
(6) The totalitarian nature of the Castro
regime has deprived the Cuban people of any peaceful means to improve their
condition and has led thousands of Cuban citizens to risk or lose their
lives in dangerous attempts to escape from Cuba to freedom.
(7) Radio Marti and Television Marti have
both been effective vehicles for providing the people of Cuba with news
and information and have helped to bolster the morale of the people of
Cuba living under tyranny.
(8) The consistent policy of the United
States towards Cuba since the beginning of the Castro regime, carried out
by both Democratic and Republican administrations, has sought to keep faith
with the people of Cuba, and has been effective in sanctioning the totalitarian
Castro regime.
(9) The United States has shown a deep commitment,
and considers it a moral obligation, to promote and protect human rights
and fundamental freedoms as expressed in the Charter of the United Nations
and in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
(10) The Congress has historically and consistently
manifested its solidarity and the solidarity of the American people with
the democratic aspirations of the Cuban people.
(11) The Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 calls
upon the President to encourage the governments of countries that conduct
trade with Cuba to restrict their trade and credit relations with Cuba
in a manner consistent with the purposes of that Act.
(12) Amendments to the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961 made by the FREEDOM Support Act require that the President,
in providing economic assistance to Russia and the emerging Eurasian democracies,
take into account the extent to which they are acting to "terminate support
for the communist regime in Cuba, including removal of troops, closing
military facilities, and ceasing trade subsidies and economic, nuclear,
and other assistance".
(13) The Cuban Government engages in the
illegal international narcotics trade and harbors fugitives from justice
in the United States.
(14) The Castro government threatens international
peace and security by engaging in acts of armed subversion and terrorism
such as the training and supplying of groups dedicated to international
violence.
(15) The Castro government has utilized
from its inception and continues to utilize torture in various forms (including
by psychiatry), as well as execution, exile, confiscation, political imprisonment,
and other forms of terror and repression, as means of retaining power.
(16) Fidel Castro has defined democratic
pluralism as "pluralistic garbage" and continues to make clear that he
has no intention of tolerating the democratization of Cuban society.
(17) The Castro government holds innocent
Cubans hostage in Cuba by no fault of the hostages themselves solely because
relatives have escaped the country.
(18) Although a signatory state to the 1928
Inter-American Convention on Asylum and the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights (which protects the right to leave one's own country),
Cuba nevertheless surrounds embassies in its capital by armed forces to
thwart the right of its citizens to seek asylum and systematically denies
that right to the Cuban people, punishing them by imprisonment for seeking
to leave the country and killing them for attempting to do so (as demonstrated
in the case of the confirmed murder of over 40 men, women, and children
who were seeking to leave Cuba on July 13, 1994).
(19) The Castro government continues to
utilize blackmail, such as the immigration crisis with which it threatened
the United States in the summer of 1994, and other unacceptable and illegal
forms of conduct to influence the actions of sovereign states in the Western
Hemisphere in violation of the Charter of the Organization of American
States and other international agreements and international law.
(20) The United Nations Commission on Human
Rights has repeatedly reported on the unacceptable human rights situation in
Cuba and has taken the extraordinary step of appointing a Special Rapporteur.
(21) The Cuban Government has consistently
refused access to the Special Rapporteur and formally expressed its decision not
to "implement so much as one comma" of the United Nations Resolutions
appointing the Rapporteur.
(22) The United Nations General Assembly passed
Resolution 47-139 on December 18, 1992, Resolution 48-142 on December 20, 1993,
and Resolution 49-200 on December 23, 1994, referencing the Special Rapporteur's
reports to the United Nations and condemning violations of human rights and
fundamental freedoms in Cuba.
(23) Article 39 of Chapter VII of the United
Nations Charter provides that the United Nations Security Council "shall
determine the existence of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace,
or act of aggression and shall make recommendations, or decide what measures
shall be taken . . ., to maintain or restore international peace and security.".
(24) The United Nations has determined that
massive and systematic violations of human rights may constitute a "threat
to peace" under Article 39 and has imposed sanctions due to such violations
of human rights in the cases of Rhodesia, South Africa, Iraq, and the former
Yugoslavia.
(25) In the case of Haiti, a neighbor of
Cuba not as close to the United States as Cuba, the United States led an
effort to obtain and did obtain a United Nations Security Council embargo
and blockade against that country due to the existence of a military dictatorship
in power less than 3 years.
(26) United Nations Security Council Resolution
940 of July 31, 1994, subsequently authorized the use of "all necessary
means" to restore the "democratically elected government of Haiti", and
the democratically elected government of Haiti was restored to power on
October 15, 1994.
(27) The Cuban people deserve to be assisted
in a decisive manner to end the tyranny that has oppressed them for 36
years, and the continued failure to do so constitutes ethically improper
conduct by the international community.
(28) For the past 36 years, the Cuban Government
has posed and continues to pose a national security threat to the United
States.
SEC. 3. PURPOSES.
The purposes of this Act are--
(1) to assist the Cuban people in regaining
their freedom and prosperity, as well as in joining the community of democratic
countries that are flourishing in the Western Hemisphere;
(2) to strengthen international sanctions
against the Castro government;
(3) to provide for the continued national
security of the United States in the face of continuing threats from the
Castro government of terrorism, theft of property from United States nationals
by the Castro government, and the political manipulation by the Castro
government of the desire of Cubans to escape that results in mass migration
to the United States;
(4) to encourage the holding of free and
fair democratic elections in Cuba, conducted under the supervision of internationally
recognized observers;
(5) to provide a policy framework for United
States support to the Cuban people in response to the formation of a transition
government or a democratically elected government in Cuba; and
(6) to protect United States nationals against
confiscatory takings and the wrongful trafficking in property confiscated by the
Castro regime.
SEC. 4. DEFINITIONS.
As used in this Act, the following terms
have the following meanings:
(1) Agency or instrumentality of a foreign
state.--The term "agency or instrumentality of a foreign state" has the
meaning given that term in section 1603(b) of title 28, United States Code.
(2) Appropriate congressional committees.--The
term "appropriate congressional committees" means the Committee on International
Relations and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives
and the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Committee on Appropriations
of the Senate.
(3) Commercial activity.--The term "commercial
activity" has the meaning given that term in section 1603(d) of title 28,
United States Code.
(4) Confiscated.--As used in titles I and
III, the term "confiscated" refers to--
(A) the nationalization, expropriation,
or other seizure by the Cuban Government of ownership or control of property,
on or after January 1, 1959--
(i) without the property having been returned or
adequate and effective compensation provided; or
(ii) without the claim to the property having
been settled pursuant to an international claims settlement agreement or
other mutually accepted settlement procedure; and
(B) the repudiation by the Cuban Government
of, the default by the Cuban Government on, or the failure of the Cuban
Government to pay, on or after January 1, 1959--
(i) a debt of any enterprise which has been
nationalized, expropriated, or otherwise taken by the Cuban Government;
(ii) a debt which is a charge on property
nationalized, expropriated, or otherwise taken by the Cuban Government;
or
(iii) a debt which was incurred by the Cuban
Government in satisfaction or settlement of a confiscated property claim.
(5) Cuban government.--(A) The term "Cuban
Government" includes the government of any political subdivision of Cuba,
and any agency or instrumentality of the Government of Cuba.
(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), the
term "agency or instrumentality of the Government of Cuba" means an agency
or instrumentality of a foreign state as defined in section 1603(b) of
title 28, United States Code, with each reference in such section to "a
foreign state" deemed to be a reference to "Cuba".
(6) Democratically elected government in cuba.--The
term "democratically elected government in Cuba" means a government
determined by the President to have met the requirements of section 206.
(7) Economic embargo of cuba.--The term
"economic embargo of Cuba" refers to--
(A) the economic embargo (including all
restrictions on trade or transactions with, and travel to or from, Cuba, and all
restrictions on transactions in property in which Cuba or nationals of Cuba have
an interest) that was imposed against Cuba pursuant to section 620(a) of the
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2370(a)), section 5(b) of the Trading
with the Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. App. 5(b)), the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (22
U.S.C. 6001 and following), or any other provision of law; and
(B) the restrictions imposed by section
902(c) of the Food Security Act of 1985.
(8) Foreign national.--The term "foreign
national" means--
(A) an alien; or
(B) any corporation, trust, partnership,
or other juridical entity not organized under the laws of the United States,
or of any State, the District of Columbia, or any commonwealth, territory,
or possession of the United States.
(9) Knowingly.--The term "knowingly" means
with knowledge or having reason to know.
(10) Official of the cuban government or the
ruling political party in cuba.--The term "official of the Cuban Government
or the ruling political party in Cuba" refers to any member of the Council
of Ministers, Council of State, central committee of the Communist Party of
Cuba, or the Politburo of Cuba, or their equivalents.
(11) Person.--The term "person" means any
person or entity, including any agency or instrumentality of a foreign
state.
(12) Property.--(A) The term "property"
means any property (including patents, copyrights, trademarks, and any
other form of intellectual property), whether real, personal, or mixed,
and any present, future, or contingent right, security, or other interest
therein, including any leasehold interest.
(B) For purposes of title III of this Act,
the term "property" does not include real property used for residential
purposes unless, as of the date of the enactment of this Act--
(i) the claim to the property is held by a United
States national and the claim has been certified under title V of the
International Claims Settlement Act of 1949; or
(ii) the property is occupied by an official
of the Cuban Government or the ruling political party in Cuba.
(13) Traffics.--(A) As used in title III,
and except as provided in subparagraph (B), a person "traffics" in confiscated
property if that person knowingly and intentionally--
(i) sells, transfers, distributes, dispenses,
brokers, manages, or otherwise disposes of confiscated property, or purchases,
leases, receives, possesses, obtains control of, manages, uses, or otherwise
acquires or holds an interest in confiscated property,
(ii) engages in a commercial activity using
or otherwise benefiting from confiscated property, or
(iii) causes, directs, participates in, or
profits from, trafficking (as described in clause (i) or (ii)) by another
person, or otherwise engages in trafficking (as described in clause (i) or (ii))
through another person,
without the authorization of any United
States national who holds a claim to the property.
(B) The term "traffics" does not include--
(i) the delivery of international
telecommunication signals to Cuba;
(ii) the trading or holding of securities
publicly traded or held, unless the trading is with or by a person determined
by the Secretary of the Treasury to be a specially designated national;
(iii) transactions and uses of property
incident to lawful travel to Cuba, to the extent that such transactions
and uses of property are necessary to the conduct of such travel; or
(iv) transactions and uses of property by
a person who is both a citizen of Cuba and a resident of Cuba, and who
is not an official of the Cuban Government or the ruling political party
in Cuba.
(14) Transition government in cuba.--The term
"transition government in Cuba" means a government that the President
determines is a transition government consistent with the requirements and
factors set forth in section 205.
(15) United states national.--The term "United
States national" means--
(A) any United States citizen; or
(B) any other legal entity which is organized
under the laws of the United States, or of any State, the District of Columbia,
or any commonwealth, territory, or possession of the United States, and
which has its principal place of business in the United States.
SEC. 5. SEVERABILITY.
If any provision of this Act or the amendments
made by this Act or the application thereof to any person or circumstance
is held invalid, the remainder of this Act, the amendments made by this
Act, or the application thereof to other persons not similarly situated
or to other circumstances shall not be affected by such invalidation.
TITLE I--STRENGTHENING INTERNATIONAL SANCTIONS
AGAINST THE CASTRO GOVERNMENT
SEC. 101. STATEMENT OF POLICY.
It is the sense of the Congress that--
(1) the acts of the Castro government, including
its massive, systematic, and extraordinary violations of human rights,
are a threat to international peace;
(2) the President should advocate, and should
instruct the United States Permanent Representative to the United Nations
to propose and seek within the Security Council, a mandatory international
embargo against the totalitarian Cuban Government pursuant to chapter VII
of the Charter of the United Nations, employing efforts similar to consultations
conducted by United States representatives with respect to Haiti;
(3) any resumption of efforts by any independent
state of the former Soviet Union to make operational any nuclear facilities
in Cuba, and any continuation of intelligence activities by such a state
from Cuba that are targeted at the United States and its citizens will
have a detrimental impact on United States assistance to such state; and
(4) in view of the threat to the national
security posed by the operation of any nuclear facility, and the Castro
government's continuing blackmail to unleash another wave of Cuban refugees
fleeing from Castro's oppression, most of whom find their way to United
States shores, further depleting limited humanitarian and other resources
of the United States, the President should do all in his power to make
it clear to the Cuban Government that--
(A) the completion and operation of any
nuclear power facility, or
(B) any further political manipulation of
the desire of Cubans to escape that results in mass migration to the United
States,
will be considered an act of aggression
which will be met with an appropriate response in order to maintain the
security of the national borders of the United States and the health and
safety of the American people.
SEC. 102. ENFORCEMENT OF THE ECONOMIC EMBARGO
OF CUBA.
(a) Policy.--
(1) Restrictions by other countries.--The
Congress hereby reaffirms section 1704(a) of the Cuban Democracy Act of
1992, which states that the President should encourage foreign countries
to restrict trade and credit relations with Cuba in a manner consistent
with the purposes of that Act.
(2) Sanctions on other countries.--The Congress
further urges the President to take immediate steps to apply the sanctions
described in section 1704(b)(1) of that Act against countries assisting
Cuba.
(b) Diplomatic Efforts.--The Secretary of
State should ensure that United States diplomatic personnel abroad understand
and, in their contacts with foreign officials, are communicating the reasons
for the United States economic embargo of Cuba, and are urging foreign
governments to cooperate more effectively with the embargo.
(c) Existing Regulations.--The President
shall instruct the Secretary of the Treasury and the Attorney General to
enforce fully the Cuban Assets Control Regulations set forth in part 515
of title 31, Code of Federal Regulations.
(d) Trading with the Enemy Act.--
(1) Civil penalties.--Subsection (b) of section
16 of the Trading with the Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. App. 16(b)), as added by Public
Law 102- 484, is amended to read as follows:
"(b)(1) A civil penalty of not to exceed
$50,000 may be imposed by the Secretary of the Treasury on any person who
violates any license, order, rule, or regulation issued in compliance with
the provisions of this Act.
"(2) Any property, funds, securities, papers,
or other articles or documents, or any vessel, together with its tackle,
apparel, furniture, and equipment, that is the subject of a violation under
paragraph (1) shall, at the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury,
be forfeited to the United States Government.
"(3) The penalties provided under this
subsection may be imposed only on the record after opportunity for an agency
hearing in accordance with sections 554 through 557 of title 5, United States
Code, with the right to prehearing discovery.
"(4) Judicial review of any penalty imposed
under this subsection may be had to the extent provided in section 702
of title 5, United States Code.".
(2) Conforming amendment; criminal forfeiture.--Section
16 of the Trading with the Enemy Act is further amended by striking subsection
(b), as added by Public Law 102-393.
(3) Clerical amendments.--Section 16 of
the Trading with the Enemy Act is further amended--
(A) by inserting "Sec. 16." before "(a)";
and
(B) in subsection (a) by striking "participants"
and inserting "participates".
(e) Denial of Visas to Certain Cuban Nationals.--It
is the sense of the Congress that the President should instruct the Secretary
of State and the Attorney General to enforce fully existing regulations
to deny visas to Cuban nationals considered by the Secretary of State to
be officers or employees of the Cuban Government or of the Communist Party
of Cuba.
(f) Coverage of Debt-for-Equity Swaps by Economic
Embargo of Cuba.-- Section 1704(b)(2) of the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (22
U.S.C. 6003(b)(2)) is amended--
(1) by striking "and" at the end of subparagraph
(A);
(2) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as
subparagraph (C); and
(3) by inserting after subparagraph (A)
the following new subparagraph:
"(B) includes an exchange, reduction, or
forgiveness of Cuban debt owed to a foreign country in return for a grant
of an equity interest in a property, investment, or operation of the Government
of Cuba (including the government of any political subdivision of Cuba,
and any agency or instrumentality of the Government of Cuba) or of a Cuban
national; and"; and
(4) by adding at the end the following flush
sentence:
"As used in this paragraph, the term 'agency
or instrumentality of the Government of Cuba' means an agency or instrumentality
of a foreign state as defined in section 1603(b) of title 28, United States
Code, with each reference in such section to 'a foreign state' deemed to
be a reference to 'Cuba'.".
(g) Telecommunications Services.--Section 1705(e)
of the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (22 U.S.C. 6004(e)) is amended by adding at
the end the following new paragraphs:
"(5) Prohibition on investment in domestic
telecommunications services.--Nothing in this subsection shall be construed
to authorize the investment by any United States person in the domestic
telecommunications network within Cuba. For purposes of this paragraph,
an 'investment' in the domestic telecommunications network within Cuba
includes the contribution (including by donation) of funds or anything
of value to or for, and the making of loans to or for, such network.
"(6) Reports to congress.--The President
shall submit to the Congress on a semiannual basis a report detailing payments
made to Cuba by any United States person as a result of the provision of
telecommunications services authorized by this subsection.".
(h) Codification of Economic Embargo.--The
economic embargo of Cuba, as in effect on March 1, 1996, including all
restrictions under part 515 of title 31, Code of Federal Regulations, shall
be in effect upon the enactment of this Act, and shall remain in effect,
subject to section 204 of this Act.
SEC. 103. PROHIBITION AGAINST INDIRECT FINANCING
OF CUBA.
(a) Prohibition.--Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, no loan, credit, or other financing may be extended knowingly
by a United States national, a permanent resident alien, or a United States
agency to any person for the purpose of financing transactions involving
any confiscated property the claim to which is owned by a United States
national as of the date of the enactment of this Act, except for financing
by the United States national owning such claim for a transaction permitted
under United States law.
(b) Suspension and Termination of Prohibition.--
(1) Suspension.--The President is authorized
to suspend the prohibition contained in subsection (a) upon a determination
made under section 203(c)(1) that a transition government in Cuba is in
power.
(2) Termination.--The prohibition contained
in subsection (a) shall cease to apply on the date on which the economic
embargo of Cuba terminates as provided in section 204.
(c) Penalties.--Violations of subsection
(a) shall be punishable by such civil penalties as are applicable to violations
of the Cuban Assets Control Regulations set forth in part 515 of title
31, Code of Federal Regulations.
(d) Definitions.--As used in this section--
(1) the term "permanent resident alien"
means an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence into the United
States; and
(2) the term "United States agency" has
the meaning given the term "agency" in section 551(1) of title 5, United
States Code.
SEC. 104. UNITED STATES OPPOSITION TO CUBAN
MEMBERSHIP IN INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS.
(a) Continued Opposition to Cuban Membership
in International Financial Institutions.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph
(2), the Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States executive
director of each international financial institution to use the voice and
vote of the United States to oppose the admission of Cuba as a member of
such institution until the President submits a determination under section
203(c)(3) that a democratically elected government in Cuba is in power.
(2) Transition government.--Once the President
submits a determination under section 203(c)(1) that a transition government
in Cuba is in power--
(A) the President is encouraged to take
steps to support the processing of Cuba's application for membership in
any international financial institution, subject to the membership taking
effect after a democratically elected government in Cuba is in power, and
(B) the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized
to instruct the United States executive director of each international
financial institution to support loans or other assistance to Cuba only
to the extent that such loans or assistance contribute to a stable foundation
for a democratically elected government in Cuba.
(b) Reduction in United States Payments
to International Financial Institutions.--If any international financial
institution approves a loan or other assistance to the Cuban Government
over the opposition of the United States, then the Secretary of the Treasury
shall withhold from payment to such institution an amount equal to the
amount of the loan or other assistance, with respect to either of the following
types of payment:
(1) The paid-in portion of the increase
in capital stock of the institution.
(2) The callable portion of the increase
in capital stock of the institution.
(c) Definition.--For purposes of this section,
the term "international financial institution" means the International
Monetary Fund, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development,
the International Development Association, the International Finance Corporation,
the Multilateral Investment Guaranty Agency, and the Inter-American Development
Bank.
SEC. 105. UNITED STATES OPPOSITION TO TERMINATION
OF THE SUSPENSION OF THE CUBAN GOVERNMENT FROM PARTICIPATION IN THE ORGANIZATION
OF AMERICAN STATES.
The President should instruct the United
States Permanent Representative to the Organization of American States
to oppose and vote against any termination of the suspension of the Cuban
Government from participation in the Organization until the President determines
under section 203(c)(3) that a democratically elected government in Cuba
is in power.
SEC. 106. ASSISTANCE BY THE INDEPENDENT
STATES OF THE FORMER SOVIET UNION FOR THE CUBAN GOVERNMENT.
(a) Reporting Requirement.--Not later than 90
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to
the appropriate congressional committees a report detailing progress toward the
withdrawal of personnel of any independent state of the former Soviet Union
(within the meaning of section 3 of the FREEDOM Support Act (22 U.S.C. 5801)),
including advisers, technicians, and military personnel, from the Cienfuegos
nuclear facility in Cuba.
(b) Criteria for Assistance.--Section 498A(a)(11)
of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2295a(a)(11)) is amended by
striking "of military facilities" and inserting "military and
intelligence facilities, including the military and intelligence facilities at
Lourdes and Cienfuegos".
(c) Ineligibility for Assistance.--
(1) In general.--Section 498A(b) of that Act (22
U.S.C. 2295a(b)) is amended--
(A) by striking "or" at the end of paragraph
(4);
(B) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph
(6); and
(C) by inserting after paragraph (4) the
following new paragraph:
"(5) for the government of any independent
state effective 30 days after the President has determined and certified to the
appropriate congressional committees (and Congress has not enacted legislation
disapproving the determination within that 30-day period) that such government
is providing assistance for, or engaging in nonmarket based trade (as defined in
section 498B(k)(3)) with, the Cuban Government; or"
(2) Definition.--Subsection (k) of section 498B
of that Act (22 U.S.C. 2295b(k)) is amended by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
"(3) Nonmarket based trade.--As used in
section 498A(b)(5), the term 'nonmarket based trade' includes exports, imports,
exchanges, or other arrangements that are provided for goods and services
(including oil and other petroleum products) on terms more favorable than those
generally available in applicable markets or for comparable commodities,
including--
"(A) exports to the Cuban Government on
terms that involve a grant, concessional price, guaranty, insurance, or subsidy;
"(B) imports from the Cuban Government at
preferential tariff rates;
"(C) exchange arrangements that include
advance delivery of commodities, arrangements in which the Cuban Government
is not held accountable for unfulfilled exchange contracts, and arrangements
under which Cuba does not pay appropriate transportation, insurance, or
finance costs; and
"(D) the exchange, reduction, or forgiveness
of debt of the Cuban Government in return for a grant by the Cuban Government
of an equity interest in a property, investment, or operation of the Cuban
Government or of a Cuban national.
"(4) Cuban government.--(A) The term 'Cuban
Government' includes the government of any political subdivision of Cuba,
and any agency or instrumentality of the Government of Cuba.
"(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), the
term 'agency or instrumentality of the Government of Cuba' means an agency
or instrumentality of a foreign state as defined in section 1603(b) of
title 28, United States Code, with each reference in such section to 'a
foreign state' deemed to be a reference to 'Cuba'.".
(3) Exception.--Section 498A(c) of the Foreign
Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2295A(c)) is amended by inserting after
paragraph (3) the following new paragraph:
"(4) The assistance is provided under the
secondary school exchange program administered by the United States Information
Agency.".
(d) Facilities at Lourdes, Cuba.--
(1) Disapproval of credits.--The Congress
expresses its strong disapproval of the extension by Russia of credits
equivalent to $200,000,000 in support of the intelligence facility at Lourdes,
Cuba, in November 1994.
(2) Reduction in assistance.--Section 498A of the
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2295a) is amended by adding at the end
the following new subsection:
"(d) Reduction in Assistance for Support
of Intelligence Facilities in Cuba.--
"(1) Reduction in assistance.--Notwithstanding
any other provision of law, the President shall withhold from assistance
provided, on or after the date of the enactment of this subsection, for
an independent state of the former Soviet Union under this Act an amount
equal to the sum of assistance and credits, if any, provided on or after
such date by such state in support of intelligence facilities in Cuba,
including the intelligence facility at Lourdes, Cuba.
"(2) Waiver.--(A) The President may waive
the requirement of paragraph (1) to withhold assistance if the President
certifies to the appropriate congressional committees that the provision
of such assistance is important to the national security of the United
States, and, in the case of such a certification made with respect to Russia,
if the President certifies that the Russian Government has assured the
United States Government that the Russian Government is not sharing intelligence
data collected at the Lourdes facility with officials or agents of the
Cuban Government.
"(B) At the time of a certification made
with respect to Russia under subparagraph (A), the President shall also
submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report describing
the intelligence activities of Russia in Cuba, including the purposes for
which the Lourdes facility is used by the Russian Government and the extent
to which the Russian Government provides payment or government credits
to the Cuban Government for the continued use of the Lourdes facility.
"(C) The report required by subparagraph
(B) may be submitted in classified form.
"(D) For purposes of this paragraph, the
term 'appropriate congressional committees' includes the Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence of the House of Representatives and the Select
Committee on Intelligence of the Senate.
"(3) Exceptions to reductions in assistance.--The
requirement of paragraph (1) to withhold assistance shall not apply with
respect to--
"(A) assistance to meet urgent humanitarian
needs, including disaster and refugee relief;
"(B) democratic political reform or rule
of law activities;
"(C) technical assistance for safety upgrades
of civilian nuclear power plants;
"(D) the creation of private sector or nongovernmental
organizations that are independent of government control;
"(E) the development of a free market economic
system;
"(F) assistance under the secondary school
exchange program administered by the United States Information Agency;
or
"(G) assistance for the purposes described
in the Cooperative Threat Reduction Act of 1993 (title XII of Public Law
103-160).".
SEC. 107. TELEVISION BROADCASTING TO CUBA.
(a) Conversion to UHF.--The Director of
the United States Information Agency shall implement a conversion of television
broadcasting to Cuba under the Television Marti Service to ultra high frequency
(UHF) broadcasting.
(b) Periodic Reports.--Not later than 45
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, and every three months
thereafter until the conversion described in subsection (a) is fully implemented,
the Director of the United States Information Agency shall submit a report
to the appropriate congressional committees on the progress made in carrying
out subsection (a).
(c) Termination of Broadcasting
Authorities.--Upon transmittal of a determination under section 203(c)(3), the
Television Broadcasting to Cuba Act (22 U.S.C. 1465aa and following) and the
Radio Broadcasting to Cuba Act (22 U.S.C. 1465 and following) are repealed.
SEC. 108. REPORTS ON COMMERCE WITH, AND
ASSISTANCE TO, CUBA FROM OTHER FOREIGN COUNTRIES.
(a) Reports Required.--Not later than 90
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, and by January 1 of each
year thereafter until the President submits a determination under section
203(c)(1), the President shall submit a report to the appropriate congressional
committees on commerce with, and assistance to, Cuba from other foreign
countries during the preceding 12-month period.
(b) Contents of Reports.--Each report required
by subsection (a) shall, for the period covered by the report, contain
the following, to the extent such information is available:
(1) A description of all bilateral assistance
provided to Cuba by other foreign countries, including humanitarian assistance.
(2) A description of Cuba's commerce with
foreign countries, including an identification of Cuba's trading partners
and the extent of such trade.
(3) A description of the joint ventures
completed, or under consideration, by foreign nationals and business firms
involving facilities in Cuba, including an identification of the location
of the facilities involved and a description of the terms of agreement
of the joint ventures and the names of the parties that are involved.
(4) A determination as to whether or not
any of the facilities described in paragraph (3) is the subject of a claim
against Cuba by a United States national.
(5) A determination of the amount of debt
of the Cuban Government that is owed to each foreign country, including--
(A) the amount of debt exchanged, forgiven,
or reduced under the terms of each investment or operation in Cuba involving
foreign nationals; and
(B) the amount of debt owed the foreign
country that has been exchanged, forgiven, or reduced in return for a grant
by the Cuban Government of an equity interest in a property, investment,
or operation of the Cuban Government or of a Cuban national.
(6) A description of the steps taken to assure
that raw materials and semifinished or finished goods produced by facilities in
Cuba involving foreign nationals do not enter the United States market, either
directly or through third countries or parties.
(7) An identification of countries that
purchase, or have purchased, arms or military supplies from Cuba or that
otherwise have entered into agreements with Cuba that have a military application,
including--
(A) a description of the military supplies,
equipment, or other material sold, bartered, or exchanged between Cuba
and such countries,
(B) a listing of the goods, services, credits,
or other consideration received by Cuba in exchange for military supplies,
equipment, or material, and
(C) the terms or conditions of any such
agreement.
SEC. 109. AUTHORIZATION OF SUPPORT FOR DEMOCRATIC
AND HUMAN RIGHTS GROUPS AND INTERNATIONAL OBSERVERS.
(a) Authorization.--Notwithstanding any other
provision of law (including section 102 of this Act), except for section 634A of
the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2394-1) and comparable
notification requirements contained in any Act making appropriations for foreign
operations, export financing, and related programs, the President is authorized
to furnish assistance and provide other support for individuals and independent
nongovernmental organizations to support democracy-building efforts for Cuba,
including the following:
(1) Published and informational matter,
such as books, videos, and cassettes, on transitions to democracy, human
rights, and market economies, to be made available to independent democratic
groups in Cuba.
(2) Humanitarian assistance to victims of
political repression, and their families.
(3) Support for democratic and human rights
groups in Cuba.
(4) Support for visits and permanent deployment
of independent international human rights monitors in Cuba.
(b) OAS Emergency Fund.--
(1) For support of human rights and elections.--The
President shall take the necessary steps to encourage the Organization
of American States to create a special emergency fund for the explicit
purpose of deploying human rights observers, election support, and election
observation in Cuba.
(2) Action of other member states.--The
President should instruct the United States Permanent Representative to
the Organization of American States to encourage other member states of
the Organization to join in calling for the Cuban Government to allow the
immediate deployment of independent human rights monitors of the Organization
throughout Cuba and on-site visits to Cuba by the Inter-American Commission
on Human Rights.
(3) Voluntary contributions for fund.--Notwithstanding
section 307 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2227) or any
other provision of law limiting the United States proportionate share of
assistance to Cuba by any international organization, the President should
provide not less than $5,000,000 of the voluntary contributions of the
United States to the Organization of American States solely for the purposes
of the special fund referred to in paragraph (1).
(c) Denial of Funds to the Cuban Government.--In
implementing this section, the President shall take all necessary steps
to ensure that no funds or other assistance is provided to the Cuban Government.
SEC. 110. IMPORTATION SAFEGUARD AGAINST
CERTAIN CUBAN PRODUCTS.
(a) Prohibition on Import of and Dealings
in Cuban Products.--The Congress notes that section 515.204 of title 31,
Code of Federal Regulations, prohibits the entry of, and dealings outside
the United States in, merchandise that--
(1) is of Cuban origin;
(2) is or has been located in or transported
from or through Cuba; or
(3) is made or derived in whole or in part
of any article which is the growth, produce, or manufacture of Cuba.
(b) Effect of NAFTA.--The Congress notes
that United States accession to the North American Free Trade Agreement
does not modify or alter the United States sanctions against Cuba. The
statement of administrative action accompanying that trade agreement specifically
states the following:
(1) "The NAFTA rules of origin will not
in any way diminish the Cuban sanctions program. . . . Nothing in the NAFTA
would operate to override this prohibition.".
(2) "Article 309(3) [of the NAFTA] permits
the United States to ensure that Cuban products or goods made from Cuban
materials are not imported into the United States from Mexico or Canada
and that United States products are not exported to Cuba through those
countries.".
(c) Restriction of Sugar Imports.--The Congress
notes that section 902(c) of the Food Security Act of 1985 (Public Law
99-198) requires the President not to allocate any of the sugar import
quota to a country that is a net importer of sugar unless appropriate officials
of that country verify to the President that the country does not import
for reexport to the United States any sugar produced in Cuba.
(d) Assurances Regarding Sugar Products.--Protection
of essential security interests of the United States requires assurances
that sugar products that are entered, or withdrawn from warehouse for consumption,
into the customs territory of the United States are not products of Cuba.
SEC. 111. WITHHOLDING OF FOREIGN ASSISTANCE
FROM COUNTRIES SUPPORTING JURAGUA NUCLEAR PLANT IN CUBA.
(a) Findings.--The Congress makes the following
findings:
(1) President Clinton stated in April 1993
that the United States opposed the construction of the Juragua nuclear
power plant because of the concerns of the United States about Cuba's ability
to ensure the safe operation of the facility and because of Cuba's refusal
to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty or ratify the Treaty of Tlatelolco.
(2) Cuba has not signed the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons or ratified the Treaty of Tlatelolco,
the latter of which establishes Latin America and the Caribbean as a nuclear
weapons-free zone.
(3) The State Department, the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, and the Department of Energy have expressed concerns about
the construction and operation of Cuba's nuclear reactors.
(4) In a September 1992 report to the Congress,
the General Accounting Office outlined concerns among nuclear energy experts
about deficiencies in the nuclear plant project in Juragua, near Cienfuegos,
Cuba, including--
(A) a lack in Cuba of a nuclear regulatory
structure;
(B) the absence in Cuba of an adequate infrastructure
to ensure the plant's safe operation and requisite maintenance;
(C) the inadequacy of training of plant
operators;
(D) reports by a former technician from
Cuba who, by examining with x-rays weld sites believed to be part of the
auxiliary plumbing system for the plant, found that 10 to 15 percent of
those sites were defective; (E) since September 5, 1992, when construction
on the plant was halted, the prolonged exposure to the elements, including
corrosive salt water vapor, of the primary reactor components; and
(F) the possible inadequacy of the upper
portion of the reactors' dome retention capability to withstand only 7
pounds of pressure per square inch, given that normal atmospheric pressure
is 32 pounds per square inch and United States reactors are designed to
accommodate pressures of 50 pounds per square inch.
(5) The United States Geological Survey
claims that it had difficulty determining answers to specific questions
regarding earthquake activity in the area near Cienfuegos because the Cuban
Government was not forthcoming with information.
(6) The Geological Survey has indicated
that the Caribbean plate, a geological formation near the south coast of
Cuba, may pose seismic risks to Cuba and the site of the power plant, and
may produce large to moderate earthquakes.
(7) On May 25, 1992, the Caribbean plate
produced an earthquake numbering 7.0 on the Richter scale.
(8) According to a study by the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, summer winds could carry radioactive
pollutants from a nuclear accident at the power plant throughout all of
Florida and parts of the States on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico as far
as Texas, and northern winds could carry the pollutants as far northeast
as Virginia and Washington, D.C.
(9) The Cuban Government, under dictator
Fidel Castro, in 1962 advocated the Soviets' launching of nuclear missiles
to the United States, which represented a direct and dangerous provocation
of the United States and brought the world to the brink of a nuclear conflict.
(10) Fidel Castro over the years has consistently
issued threats against the United States Government, most recently that
he would unleash another perilous mass migration from Cuba upon the enactment
of this Act.
(11) Despite the various concerns about
the plant's safety and operational problems, a feasibility study is being
conducted that would establish a support group to include Russia, Cuba,
and third countries with the objective of completing and operating the
plant.
(b) Withholding of Foreign Assistance.--
(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, the President shall withhold from assistance allocated,
on or after the date of the enactment of this Act, for any country an amount
equal to the sum of assistance and credits, if any, provided on or after
such date of enactment by that country or any entity in that country in
support of the completion of the Cuban nuclear facility at Juragua, near
Cienfuegos, Cuba.
(2) Exceptions.--The requirement of paragraph
(1) to withhold assistance shall not apply with respect to--
(A) assistance to meet urgent humanitarian
needs, including disaster and refugee relief;
(B) democratic political reform or rule
of law activities;
(C) the creation of private sector or nongovernmental
organizations that are independent of government control;
(D) the development of a free market economic
system;
(E) assistance for the purposes described
in the Cooperative Threat Reduction Act of 1993 (title XII of Public Law
103-160); or
(F) assistance under the secondary school
exchange program administered by the United States Information Agency.
(3) Definition.--As used in paragraph (1),
the term "assistance" means assistance under the Foreign Assistance Act
of 1961, credits, sales, guarantees of extensions of credit, and other
assistance under the Arms Export Control Act, assistance under titles I
and III of the Agricultural Trade Development and Assistance Act of 1954,
assistance under the FREEDOM Support Act, and any other program of assistance
or credits provided by the United States to other countries under other
provisions of law.
SEC. 112. REINSTITUTION OF FAMILY REMITTANCES
AND TRAVEL TO CUBA.
It is the sense of the Congress that the
President should--
(1)(A) before considering the reinstitution
of general licenses for family remittances to Cuba, insist that, prior
to such reinstitution, the Cuban Government permit the unfettered operation
of small businesses fully empowered with the right to hire others to whom
they may pay wages and to buy materials necessary in the operation of the
businesses, and with such other authority and freedom as are required to
foster the operation of small businesses throughout Cuba; and
(B) if licenses described in subparagraph
(A) are reinstituted, require a specific license for remittances described
in subparagraph (A) in amounts of more than $500; and
(2) before considering the reinstitution
of general licenses for travel to Cuba by individuals resident in the United
States who are family members of Cuban nationals who are resident in Cuba,
insist on such actions by the Cuban Government as abrogation of the sanction
for departure from Cuba by refugees, release of political prisoners, recognition
of the right of association, and other fundamental freedoms.
SEC. 113. EXPULSION OF CRIMINALS FROM CUBA.
The President shall instruct all United
States Government officials who engage in official contacts with the Cuban
Government to raise on a regular basis the extradition of or rendering
to the United States all persons residing in Cuba who are sought by the
United States Department of Justice for crimes committed in the United
States.
SEC. 114. NEWS BUREAUS IN CUBA.
(a) Establishment of News Bureaus.--The
President is authorized to establish and implement an exchange of news
bureaus between the United States and Cuba, if the exchange meets the following
conditions:
(1) The exchange is fully reciprocal.
(2) The Cuban Government agrees not to interfere
with the establishment of news bureaus or with the movement in Cuba of
journalists of any United States-based news organizations, including Radio
Marti and Television Marti.
(3) The Cuban Government agrees not to interfere
with decisions of United States-based news organizations with respect to
individuals assigned to work as journalists in their news bureaus in Cuba.
(4) The Department of the Treasury is able
to ensure that only accredited journalists regularly employed with a news
gathering organization travel to Cuba under this subsection.
(5) The Cuban Government agrees not to interfere
with the transmission of telecommunications signals of news bureaus or
with the distribution within Cuba of publications of any United States-based
news organization that has a news bureau in Cuba.
(b) Assurance Against Espionage.--In implementing
this section, the President shall take all necessary steps to ensure the
safety and security of the United States against espionage by Cuban journalists
it believes to be working for the intelligence agencies of the Cuban Government.
(c) Fully Reciprocal.--As used in subsection
(a)(1), the term "fully reciprocal" means that all news services, news
organizations, and broadcasting services, including such services or organizations
that receive financing, assistance, or other support from a governmental
or official source, are permitted to establish and operate a news bureau
in the United States and Cuba.
SEC. 115. EFFECT OF ACT ON LAWFUL UNITED
STATES GOVERNMENT ACTIVITIES.
Nothing in this Act prohibits any lawfully
authorized investigative, protective, or intelligence activity of a law
enforcement agency, or of an intelligence agency, of the United States.
SEC. 116. CONDEMNATION OF CUBAN ATTACK ON
AMERICAN AIRCRAFT.
(a) Findings.--The Congress makes the following
findings:
(1) Brothers to the Rescue is a Miami-based
humanitarian organization engaged in searching for and aiding Cuban refugees
in the Straits of Florida, and was engaged in such a mission on Saturday,
February 24, 1996.
(2) The members of Brothers to the Rescue
were flying unarmed and defenseless planes in a mission identical to hundreds
they have flown since 1991 and posed no threat whatsoever to the Cuban
Government, the Cuban military, or the Cuban people.
(3) Statements by the Cuban Government that
Brothers to the Rescue has engaged in covert operations, bombing campaigns,
and commando operations against the Government of Cuba have no basis in
fact.
(4) The Brothers to the Rescue aircraft
notified air traffic controllers as to their flight plans, which would
take them south of the 24th parallel and close to Cuban airspace.
(5) International law provides a nation
with airspace over the 12- mile territorial sea.
(6) The response of Fidel Castro's dictatorship
to Saturday's afternoon flight was to scramble 2 fighter jets from a Havana
airfield.
(7) At approximately 3:24 p.m., the pilot
of one of the Cuban MiGs received permission and proceeded to shoot down
one Brothers to the Rescue airplane more than 6 miles north of the Cuban
exclusion zone, or 18 miles from the Cuban coast.
(8) Approximately 7 minutes later, the pilot
of the Cuban fighter jet received permission and proceeded to shoot down
the second Brothers to the Rescue airplane almost 18.5 miles north of the
Cuban exclusion zone, or 30.5 miles from the Cuban coast.
(9) The Cuban dictatorship, if it truly
felt threatened by the flight of these unarmed aircraft, could have and
should have pursued other peaceful options as required by international
law.
(10) The response chosen by Fidel Castro,
the use of lethal force, was completely inappropriate to the situation
presented to the Cuban Government, making such actions a blatant and barbaric
violation of international law and tantamount to cold-blooded murder.
(11) There were no survivors of the attack
on these aircraft, and the crew of a third aircraft managed to escape this
criminal attack by Castro's Air Force.
(12) The crew members of the destroyed planes,
Pablo Morales, Carlos Costa, Mario de la Pena, and Armando Alejandre, were
United States citizens from Miami flying with Brothers to the Rescue on
a voluntary basis.
(13) It is incumbent upon the United States
Government to protect the lives and livelihoods of United States citizens
as well as the rights of free passage and humanitarian missions.
(14) This premeditated act took place after
a week-long wave of repression by the Cuban Government against Concilio
Cubano, an umbrella organization of human rights activists, dissidents,
independent economists, and independent journalists, among others.
(15) The wave of repression against Concilio
Cubano, whose membership is committed to peaceful democratic change in
Cuba, included arrests, strip searches, house arrests, and in some cases
sentences to more than 1 year in jail.
(b) Statements by the Congress.--(1) The
Congress strongly condemns the act of terrorism by the Castro regime in
shooting down the Brothers to the Rescue aircraft on February 24, 1996.
(2) The Congress extends its condolences
to the families of Pablo Morales, Carlos Costa, Mario de la Pena, and Armando
Alejandre, the victims of the attack.
(3) The Congress urges the President to
seek, in the International Court of Justice, indictment for this act of
terrorism by Fidel Castro.
TITLE II--ASSISTANCE TO A FREE AND INDEPENDENT
CUBA
SEC. 201. POLICY TOWARD A TRANSITION GOVERNMENT
AND A DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED GOVERNMENT IN CUBA.
The policy of the United States is as follows:
(1) To support the self-determination of
the Cuban people.
(2) To recognize that the self-determination
of the Cuban people is a sovereign and national right of the citizens of
Cuba which must be exercised free of interference by the government of
any other country.
(3) To encourage the Cuban people to empower
themselves with a government which reflects the self-determination of the
Cuban people.
(4) To recognize the potential for a difficult
transition from the current regime in Cuba that may result from the initiatives
taken by the Cuban people for self-determination in response to the intransigence
of the Castro regime in not allowing any substantive political or economic
reforms, and to be prepared to provide the Cuban people with humanitarian,
developmental, and other economic assistance.
(5) In solidarity with the Cuban people,
to provide appropriate forms of assistance--
(A) to a transition government in Cuba;
(B) to facilitate the rapid movement from
such a transition government to a democratically elected government in
Cuba that results from an expression of the self-determination of the Cuban
people; and
(C) to support such a democratically elected
government.
(6) Through such assistance, to facilitate
a peaceful transition to representative democracy and a market economy
in Cuba and to consolidate democracy in Cuba.
(7) To deliver such assistance to the Cuban
people only through a transition government in Cuba, through a democratically
elected government in Cuba, through United States Government organizations,
or through United States, international, or indigenous nongovernmental
organizations.
(8) To encourage other countries and multilateral
organizations to provide similar assistance, and to work cooperatively
with such countries and organizations to coordinate such assistance.
(9) To ensure that appropriate assistance
is rapidly provided and distributed to the people of Cuba upon the institution
of a transition government in Cuba.
(10) Not to provide favorable treatment
or influence on behalf of any individual or entity in the selection by
the Cuban people of their future government.
(11) To assist a transition government in
Cuba and a democratically elected government in Cuba to prepare the Cuban
military forces for an appropriate role in a democracy.
(12) To be prepared to enter into negotiations
with a democratically elected government in Cuba either to return the United
States Naval Base at Guantanamo to Cuba or to renegotiate the present agreement
under mutually agreeable terms.
(13) To consider the restoration of diplomatic
recognition and support the reintegration of the Cuban Government into
Inter-American organizations when the President determines that there exists
a democratically elected government in Cuba.
(14) To take steps to remove the economic
embargo of Cuba when the President determines that a transition to a democratically
elected government in Cuba has begun.
(15) To assist a democratically elected
government in Cuba to strengthen and stabilize its national currency.
(16) To pursue trade relations with a free,
democratic, and independent Cuba.
SEC. 202. ASSISTANCE FOR THE CUBAN PEOPLE.
(a) Authorization.--
(1) In general.--The President shall develop
a plan for providing economic assistance to Cuba at such time as the President
determines that a transition government or a democratically elected government
in Cuba (as determined under section 203(c)) is in power.
(2) Effect on other laws.--Assistance may
be provided under this section subject to an authorization of appropriations
and subject to the availability of appropriations.
(b) Plan for Assistance.--
(1) Development of plan.--The President
shall develop a plan for providing assistance under this section--
(A) to Cuba when a transition government
in Cuba is in power; and
(B) to Cuba when a democratically elected
government in Cuba is in power.
(2) Types of assistance.--Assistance under
the plan developed under paragraph (1) may, subject to an authorization
of appropriations and subject to the availability of appropriations, include
the following:
(A) Transition government.--(i) Except as
provided in clause (ii), assistance to Cuba under a transition government
shall, subject to an authorization of appropriations and subject to the
availability of appropriations, be limited to--
(I) such food, medicine, medical supplies
and equipment, and assistance to meet emergency energy needs, as is necessary
to meet the basic human needs of the Cuban people; and
(II) assistance described in subparagraph
(C).
(ii) Assistance in addition to assistance
under clause (i) may be provided, but only after the President certifies
to the appropriate congressional committees, in accordance with procedures
applicable to reprogramming notifications under section 634A of the Foreign
Assistance Act of 1961, that such assistance is essential to the successful
completion of the transition to democracy.
(iii) Only after a transition government
in Cuba is in power, freedom of individuals to travel to visit their relatives
without any restrictions shall be permitted.
(B) Democratically elected government.--Assistance
to a democratically elected government in Cuba may, subject to an authorization
of appropriations and subject to the availability of appropriations, consist
of economic assistance in addition to assistance available under subparagraph
(A), together with assistance described in subparagraph (C). Such economic
assistance may include--
(i) assistance under chapter 1 of part I
(relating to development assistance), and chapter 4 of part II (relating
to the economic support fund), of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961;
(ii) assistance under the Agricultural Trade
Development and Assistance Act of 1954;
(iii) financing, guarantees, and other forms
of assistance provided by the Export-Import Bank of the United States;
(iv) financial support provided by the Overseas
Private Investment Corporation for investment projects in Cuba;
(v) assistance provided by the Trade and
Development Agency;
(vi) Peace Corps programs; and
(vii) other appropriate assistance to carry
out the policy of section 201.
(C) Military adjustment assistance.--Assistance
to a transition government in Cuba and to a democratically elected government
in Cuba shall also include assistance in preparing the Cuban military forces
to adjust to an appropriate role in a democracy.
(c) Strategy for Distribution.--The plan
developed under subsection (b) shall include a strategy for distributing
assistance under the plan.
(d) Distribution.--Assistance under the
plan developed under subsection (b) shall be provided through United States
Government organizations and nongovernmental organizations and private
and voluntary organizations, whether within or outside the United States,
including humanitarian, educational, labor, and private sector organizations.
(e) International Efforts.--The President
shall take the necessary steps--
(1) to seek to obtain the agreement of other
countries and of international financial institutions and multilateral
organizations to provide to a transition government in Cuba, and to a democratically
elected government in Cuba, assistance comparable to that provided by the
United States under this Act; and
(2) to work with such countries, institutions,
and organizations to coordinate all such assistance programs.
(f) Communication With the Cuban People.--The
President shall take the necessary steps to communicate to the Cuban people
the plan for assistance developed under this section.
(g) Report to Congress.--Not later than
180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the President shall
transmit to the appropriate congressional committees a report describing
in detail the plan developed under this section.
(h) Report on Trade and Investment Relations.--
(1) Report to congress.--The President,
following the transmittal to the Congress of a determination under section
203(c)(3) that a democratically elected government in Cuba is in power,
shall submit to the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives
and the Committee on Finance of the Senate and the appropriate congressional
committees a report that describes--
(A) acts, policies, and practices which
constitute significant barriers to, or distortions of, United States trade
in goods or services or foreign direct investment with respect to Cuba;
(B) policy objectives of the United States
regarding trade relations with a democratically elected government in Cuba,
and the reasons therefor, including possible--
(i) reciprocal extension of nondiscriminatory
trade treatment (most-favored-nation treatment);
(ii) designation of Cuba as a beneficiary
developing country under title V of the Trade Act of 1974 (relating to
the Generalized System of Preferences) or as a beneficiary country under
the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act, and the implications of such
designation with respect to trade with any other country that is such a
beneficiary developing country or beneficiary country or is a party to
the North American Free Trade Agreement; and
(iii) negotiations regarding free trade,
including the accession of Cuba to the North American Free Trade Agreement;
(C) specific trade negotiating objectives
of the United States with respect to Cuba, including the objectives described
in section 108(b)(5) of the North American Free Trade Agreement Implementation
Act (19 U.S.C. 3317(b)(5)); and
(D) actions proposed or anticipated to be
undertaken, and any proposed legislation necessary or appropriate, to achieve
any of such policy and negotiating objectives.
(2) Consultation.--The President shall consult
with the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives and
the Committee on Finance of the Senate and the appropriate congressional
committees and shall seek advice from the appropriate advisory committees
established under section 135 of the Trade Act of 1974 regarding the policy
and negotiating objectives and the legislative proposals described in paragraph
(1).
SEC. 203. COORDINATION OF ASSISTANCE PROGRAM;
IMPLEMENTATION AND REPORTS TO CONGRESS; REPROGRAMMING.
(a) Coordinating Official.--The President
shall designate a coordinating official who shall be responsible for--
(1) implementing the strategy for distributing
assistance described in section 202(b);
(2) ensuring the speedy and efficient distribution
of such assistance; and
(3) ensuring coordination among, and appropriate
oversight by, the agencies of the United States that provide assistance
described in section 202(b), including resolving any disputes among such
agencies.
(b) United States-Cuba Council.--Upon making
a determination under subsection (c)(3) that a democratically elected government
in Cuba is in power, the President, after consultation with the coordinating
official, is authorized to designate a United States-Cuba council--
(1) to ensure coordination between the United
States Government and the private sector in responding to change in Cuba,
and in promoting market-based development in Cuba; and
(2) to establish periodic meetings between
representatives of the United States and Cuban private sectors for the
purpose of facilitating bilateral trade.
(c) Implementation of Plan; Reports to Congress.--
(1) Implementation with respect to transition
government.--Upon making a determination that a transition government in
Cuba is in power, the President shall transmit that determination to the
appropriate congressional committees and shall, subject to an authorization
of appropriations and subject to the availability of appropriations, commence
the delivery and distribution of assistance to such transition government
under the plan developed under section 202(b).
(2) Reports to congress.--(A) The President
shall transmit to the appropriate congressional committees a report setting
forth the strategy for providing assistance described in section 202(b)(2)
(A) and (C) to the transition government in Cuba under the plan of assistance
developed under section 202(b), the types of such assistance, and the extent
to which such assistance has been distributed in accordance with the plan.
(B) The President shall transmit the report
not later than 90 days after making the determination referred to in paragraph
(1), except that the President shall transmit the report in preliminary
form not later than 15 days after making that determination.
(3) Implementation with respect to democratically
elected government.--The President shall, upon determining that a democratically
elected government in Cuba is in power, submit that determination to the
appropriate congressional committees and shall, subject to an authorization
of appropriations and subject to the availability of appropriations, commence
the delivery and distribution of assistance to such democratically elected
government under the plan developed under section 202(b).
(4) Annual reports to congress.--Not later
than 60 days after the end of each fiscal year, the President shall transmit
to the appropriate congressional committees a report on the assistance
provided under the plan developed under section 202(b), including a description
of each type of assistance, the amounts expended for such assistance, and
a description of the assistance to be provided under the plan in the current
fiscal year.
(d) Reprogramming.--Any changes in the assistance
to be provided under the plan developed under section 202(b) may not be
made unless the President notifies the appropriate congressional committees
at least 15 days in advance in accordance with the procedures applicable
to reprogramming notifications under section 634A of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2394-1).
SEC. 204. TERMINATION OF THE ECONOMIC EMBARGO
OF CUBA.
(a) Presidential Actions.--Upon submitting
a determination to the appropriate congressional committees under section
203(c)(1) that a transition government in Cuba is in power, the President,
after consultation with the Congress, is authorized to take steps to suspend
the economic embargo of Cuba and to suspend the right of action created
in section 302 with respect to actions thereafter filed against the Cuban
Government, to the extent that such steps contribute to a stable foundation
for a democratically elected government in Cuba.
(b) Suspension of Certain Provisions of
Law.--In carrying out subsection (a), the President may suspend the enforcement
of--
(1) section 620(a) of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2370(a));
(2) section 620(f) of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2370(f)) with respect to the "Republic of Cuba";
(3) sections 1704, 1705(d), and 1706 of
the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (22 U.S.C. 6003, 6004(d), and 6005);
(4) section 902(c) of the Food Security
Act of 1985; and
(5) the prohibitions on transactions described
in part 515 of title 31, Code of Federal Regulations.
(c) Additional Presidential Actions.--Upon
submitting a determination to the appropriate congressional committees
under section 203(c)(3) that a democratically elected government in Cuba
is in power, the President shall take steps to terminate the economic embargo
of Cuba, including the restrictions under part 515 of title 31, Code of
Federal Regulations.
(d) Conforming Amendments.--On the date
on which the President submits a determination under section 203(c)(3)--
(1) section 620(a) of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2370(a)) is repealed;
(2) section 620(f) of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2370(f)) is amended by striking "Republic of Cuba";
(3) sections 1704, 1705(d), and 1706 of
the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (22 U.S.C. 6003, 6004(d), and 6005) are
repealed; and
(4) section 902(c) of the Food Security
Act of 1985 is repealed.
(e) Review of Suspension of Economic Embargo.--
(1) Review.--If the President takes action
under subsection (a) to suspend the economic embargo of Cuba, the President
shall immediately so notify the Congress. The President shall report to
the Congress no less frequently than every 6 months thereafter, until he
submits a determination under section 203(c)(3) that a democratically elected
government in Cuba is in power, on the progress being made by Cuba toward
the establishment of such a democratically elected government. The action
of the President under subsection (a) shall cease to be effective upon
the enactment of a joint resolution described in paragraph (2).
(2) Joint resolutions.--For purposes of
this subsection, the term "joint resolution" means only a joint resolution
of the 2 Houses of Congress, the matter after the resolving clause of which
is as follows: "That the Congress disapproves the action of the President
under section 204(a) of the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD)
Act of 1996 to suspend the economic embargo of Cuba, notice of which was
submitted to the Congress on __.", with the blank space being filled with
the appropriate date.
(3) Referral to committees.--Joint resolutions
introduced in the House of Representatives shall be referred to the Committee
on International Relations and joint resolutions introduced in the Senate
shall be referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
(4) Procedures.--(A) Any joint resolution
shall be considered in the Senate in accordance with the provisions of
section 601(b) of the International Security Assistance and Arms Export
Control Act of 1976.
(B) For the purpose of expediting the consideration
and enactment of joint resolutions, a motion to proceed to the consideration
of any joint resolution after it has been reported by the appropriate committee
shall be treated as highly privileged in the House of Representatives.
(C) Not more than 1 joint resolution may
be considered in the House of Representatives and the Senate in the 6-month
period beginning on the date on which the President notifies the Congress
under paragraph (1) of the action taken under subsection (a), and in each
6-month period thereafter.
SEC. 205. REQUIREMENTS AND FACTORS FOR DETERMINING
A TRANSITION GOVERNMENT.
(a) Requirements.--For the purposes of this
Act, a transition government in Cuba is a government that--
(1) has legalized all political activity;
(2) has released all political prisoners
and allowed for investigations of Cuban prisons by appropriate international
human rights organizations;
(3) has dissolved the present Department
of State Security in the Cuban Ministry of the Interior, including the
Committees for the Defense of the Revolution and the Rapid Response Brigades;
and
(4) has made public commitments to organizing
free and fair elections for a new government--
(A) to be held in a timely manner within
a period not to exceed 18 months after the transition government assumes
power;
(B) with the participation of multiple independent
political parties that have full access to the media on an equal basis,
including (in the case of radio, television, or other telecommunications
media) in terms of allotments of time for such access and the times of
day such allotments are given; and
(C) to be conducted under the supervision
of internationally recognized observers, such as the Organization of American
States, the United Nations, and other election monitors;
(5) has ceased any interference with Radio
Marti or Television Marti broadcasts;
(6) makes public commitments to and is making
demonstrable progress in--
(A) establishing an independent judiciary;
(B) respecting internationally recognized
human rights and basic freedoms as set forth in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, to which Cuba is a signatory nation;
(C) allowing the establishment of independent
trade unions as set forth in conventions 87 and 98 of the International
Labor Organization, and allowing the establishment of independent social,
economic, and political associations;
(7) does not include Fidel Castro or Raul
Castro; and
(8) has given adequate assurances that it
will allow the speedy and efficient distribution of assistance to the Cuban
people.
(b) Additional Factors.--In addition to
the requirements in subsection (a), in determining whether a transition
government in Cuba is in power, the President shall take into account the
extent to which that government--
(1) is demonstrably in transition from a
communist totalitarian dictatorship to representative democracy;
(2) has made public commitments to, and
is making demonstrable progress in--
(A) effectively guaranteeing the rights
of free speech and freedom of the press, including granting permits to
privately owned media and telecommunications companies to operate in Cuba;
(B) permitting the reinstatement of citizenship
to Cuban-born persons returning to Cuba;
(C) assuring the right to private property;
and
(D) taking appropriate steps to return to
United States citizens (and entities which are 50 percent or more beneficially
owned by United States citizens) property taken by the Cuban Government
from such citizens and entities on or after January 1, 1959, or to provide
equitable compensation to such citizens and entities for such property;
(3) has extradited or otherwise rendered
to the United States all persons sought by the United States Department
of Justice for crimes committed in the United States; and
(4) has permitted the deployment throughout
Cuba of independent and unfettered international human rights monitors.
SEC. 206. REQUIREMENTS FOR DETERMINING A
DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED GOVERNMENT.
For purposes of this Act, a democratically
elected government in Cuba, in addition to meeting the requirements of
section 205(a), is a government which--
(1) results from free and fair elections--
(A) conducted under the supervision of internationally
recognized observers; and
(B) in which--
(i) opposition parties were permitted ample
time to organize and campaign for such elections; and
(ii) all candidates were permitted full
access to the media;
(2) is showing respect for the basic civil
liberties and human rights of the citizens of Cuba;
(3) is substantially moving toward a market-oriented
economic system based on the right to own and enjoy property;
(4) is committed to making constitutional
changes that would ensure regular free and fair elections and the full
enjoyment of basic civil liberties and human rights by the citizens of
Cuba;
(5) has made demonstrable progress in establishing
an independent judiciary; and
(6) has made demonstrable progress in returning
to United States citizens (and entities which are 50 percent or more beneficially
owned by United States citizens) property taken by the Cuban Government
from such citizens and entities on or after January 1, 1959, or providing
full compensation for such property in accordance with international law
standards and practice.
SEC. 207. SETTLEMENT OF OUTSTANDING UNITED
STATES CLAIMS TO CONFISCATED PROPERTY IN CUBA.
(a) Report to Congress.--Not later than
180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
State shall provide a report to the appropriate congressional committees
containing an assessment of the property dispute question in Cuba, including--
(1) an estimate of the number and amount
of claims to property confiscated by the Cuban Government that are held
by United States nationals in addition to those claims certified under
section 507 of the International Claims Settlement Act of 1949;
(2) an assessment of the significance of
promptly resolving confiscated property claims to the revitalization of
the Cuban economy;
(3) a review and evaluation of technical
and other assistance that the United States could provide to help either
a transition government in Cuba or a democratically elected government
in Cuba establish mechanisms to resolve property questions;
(4) an assessment of the role and types
of support the United States could provide to help resolve claims to property
confiscated by the Cuban Government that are held by United States nationals
who did not receive or qualify for certification under section 507 of the
International Claims Settlement Act of 1949; and
(5) an assessment of any areas requiring
legislative review or action regarding the resolution of property claims
in Cuba prior to a change of government in Cuba.
(d) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense
of the Congress that the satisfactory resolution of property claims by
a Cuban Government recognized by the United States remains an essential
condition for the full resumption of economic and diplomatic relations
between the United States and Cuba.
TITLE III--PROTECTION OF PROPERTY RIGHTS
OF UNITED STATES NATIONALS
SEC. 301. FINDINGS.
The Congress makes the following findings:
(1) Individuals enjoy a fundamental right
to own and enjoy property which is enshrined in the United States Constitution.
(2) The wrongful confiscation or taking
of property belonging to United States nationals by the Cuban Government,
and the subsequent exploitation of this property at the expense of the
rightful owner, undermines the comity of nations, the free flow of commerce,
and economic development.
(3) Since Fidel Castro seized power in Cuba
in 1959--
(A) he has trampled on the fundamental rights
of the Cuban people; and
(B) through his personal despotism, he has
confiscated the property of--
(i) millions of his own citizens;
(ii) thousands of United States nationals;
and
(iii) thousands more Cubans who claimed
asylum in the United States as refugees because of persecution and later
became naturalized citizens of the United States.
(4) It is in the interest of the Cuban people
that the Cuban Government respect equally the property rights of Cuban
nationals and nationals of other countries.
(5) The Cuban Government is offering foreign
investors the opportunity to purchase an equity interest in, manage, or
enter into joint ventures using property and assets some of which were
confiscated from United States nationals.
(6) This "trafficking" in confiscated property
provides badly needed financial benefit, including hard currency, oil,
and productive investment and expertise, to the current Cuban Government
and thus undermines the foreign policy of the United States--
(A) to bring democratic institutions to
Cuba through the pressure of a general economic embargo at a time when
the Castro regime has proven to be vulnerable to international economic
pressure; and
(B) to protect the claims of United States
nationals who had property wrongfully confiscated by the Cuban Government.
(7) The United States Department of State
has notified other governments that the transfer to third parties of properties
confiscated by the Cuban Government "would complicate any attempt to return
them to their original owners".
(8) The international judicial system, as
currently structured, lacks fully effective remedies for the wrongful confiscation
of property and for unjust enrichment from the use of wrongfully confiscated
property by governments and private entities at the expense of the rightful
owners of the property.
(9) International law recognizes that a
nation has the ability to provide for rules of law with respect to conduct
outside its territory that has or is intended to have substantial effect
within its territory.
(10) The United States Government has an
obligation to its citizens to provide protection against wrongful confiscations
by foreign nations and their citizens, including the provision of private
remedies.
(11) To deter trafficking in wrongfully
confiscated property, United States nationals who were the victims of these
confiscations should be endowed with a judicial remedy in the courts of
the United States that would deny traffickers any profits from economically
exploiting Castro's wrongful seizures.
SEC. 302. LIABILITY FOR TRAFFICKING IN CONFISCATED
PROPERTY CLAIMED BY UNITED STATES NATIONALS.
(a) Civil Remedy.--
(1) Liability for trafficking.--(A) Except
as otherwise provided in this section, any person that, after the end of
the 3-month period beginning on the effective date of this title, traffics
in property which was confiscated by the Cuban Government on or after January
1, 1959, shall be liable to any United States national who owns the claim
to such property for money damages in an amount equal to the sum of--
(i) the amount which is the greater of--
(I) the amount, if any, certified to the
claimant by the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission under the International
Claims Settlement Act of 1949, plus interest;
(II) the amount determined under section
303(a)(2), plus interest; or
(III) the fair market value of that property,
calculated as being either the current value of the property, or the value
of the property when confiscated plus interest, whichever is greater; and
(ii) court costs and reasonable attorneys'
fees.
(B) Interest under subparagraph (A)(i) shall
be at the rate set forth in section 1961 of title 28, United States Code,
computed by the court from the date of confiscation of the property involved
to the date on which the action is brought under this subsection.
(2) Presumption in favor of the certified
claims.--There shall be a presumption that the amount for which a person
is liable under clause (i) of paragraph (1)(A) is the amount that is certified
as described in subclause (I) of that clause. The presumption shall be
rebuttable by clear and convincing evidence that the amount described in
subclause (II) or (III) of that clause is the appropriate amount of liability
under that clause.
(3) Increased liability.--(A) Any person
that traffics in confiscated property for which liability is incurred under
paragraph (1) shall, if a United States national owns a claim with respect
to that property which was certified by the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission
under title V of the International Claims Settlement Act of 1949, be liable
for damages computed in accordance with subparagraph (C).
(B) If the claimant in an action under this
subsection (other than a United States national to whom subparagraph (A)
applies) provides, after the end of the 3-month period described in paragraph
(1) notice to--
(i) a person against whom the action is
to be initiated, or
(ii) a person who is to be joined as a defendant
in the action,
at least 30 days before initiating the action
or joining such person as a defendant, as the case may be, and that person,
after the end of the 30- day period beginning on the date the notice is
provided, traffics in the confiscated property that is the subject of the
action, then that person shall be liable to that claimant for damages computed
in accordance with subparagraph (C).
(C) Damages for which a person is liable
under subparagraph (A) or subparagraph (B) are money damages in an amount
equal to the sum of--
(i) the amount determined under paragraph
(1)(A)(ii), and
(ii) 3 times the amount determined applicable
under paragraph (1)(A)(i).
(D) Notice to a person under subparagraph
(B)--
(i) shall be in writing;
(ii) shall be posted by certified mail or
personally delivered to the person; and
(iii) shall contain--
(I) a statement of intention to commence
the action under this section or to join the person as a defendant (as
the case may be), together with the reasons therefor;
(II) a demand that the unlawful trafficking
in the claimant's property cease immediately; and
(III) a copy of the summary statement published
under paragraph (8).
(4) Applicability.--(A) Except as otherwise
provided in this paragraph, actions may be brought under paragraph (1)
with respect to property confiscated before, on, or after the date of the
enactment of this Act.
(B) In the case of property confiscated
before the date of the enactment of this Act, a United States national
may not bring an action under this section on a claim to the confiscated
property unless such national acquires ownership of the claim before such
date of enactment.
(C) In the case of property confiscated
on or after the date of the enactment of this Act, a United States national
who, after the property is confiscated, acquires ownership of a claim to
the property by assignment for value, may not bring an action on the claim
under this section.
(5) Treatment of certain actions.--(A) In
the case of a United States national who was eligible to file a claim with
the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission under title V of the International
Claims Settlement Act of 1949 but did not so file the claim, that United
States national may not bring an action on that claim under this section.
(B) In the case of any action brought under
this section by a United States national whose underlying claim in the
action was timely filed with the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission under
title V of the International Claims Settlement Act of 1949 but was denied
by the Commission, the court shall accept the findings of the Commission
on the claim as conclusive in the action under this section.
(C) A United States national, other than
a United States national bringing an action under this section on a claim
certified under title V of the International Claims Settlement Act of 1949,
may not bring an action on a claim under this section before the end of
the 2-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act.
(D) An interest in property for which a
United States national has a claim certified under title V of the International
Claims Settlement Act of 1949 may not be the subject of a claim in an action
under this section by any other person. Any person bringing an action under
this section whose claim has not been so certified shall have the burden
of establishing for the court that the interest in property that is the
subject of the claim is not the subject of a claim so certified.
(6) Inapplicability of act of state doctrine.--No
court of the United States shall decline, based upon the act of state doctrine,
to make a determination on the merits in an action brought under paragraph
(1) .
(7) Licenses not required.--(A) Notwithstanding
any other provision of law, an action under this section may be brought
and may be settled, and a judgment rendered in such action may be enforced,
without obtaining any license or other permission from any agency of the
United States, except that this paragraph shall not apply to the execution
of a judgment against, or the settlement of actions involving, property
blocked under the authorities of section 5(b) of the Trading with the Enemy
Act that were being exercised on July 1, 1977, as a result of a national
emergency declared by the President before such date, and are being exercised
on the date of the enactment of this Act.
(B) Notwithstanding any other provision
of law, and for purposes of this title only, any claim against the Cuban
Government shall not be deemed to be an interest in property the transfer
of which to a United States national required before the enactment of this
Act, or requires after the enactment of this Act, a license issued by,
or the permission of, any agency of the United States.
(8) Publication by attorney general.--Not
later than 60 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Attorney
General shall prepare and publish in the Federal Register a concise summary
of the provisions of this title, including a statement of the liability
under this title of a person trafficking in confiscated property, and the
remedies available to United States nationals under this title.
(b) Amount in Controversy.--An action may
be brought under this section by a United States national only where the
amount in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $50,000, exclusive of
interest, costs, and attorneys' fees. In calculating $50,000 for purposes
of the preceding sentence, the applicable amount under subclause (I), (II),
or (III) of subsection (a)(1)(A)(i) may not be tripled as provided in subsection
(a)(3).
(c) Procedural Requirements.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in this
title, the provisions of title 28, United States Code, and the rules of
the courts of the United States apply to actions under this section to
the same extent as such provisions and rules apply to any other action
brought under section 1331 of title 28, United States Code.
(2) Service of process.--In an action under
this section, service of process on an agency or instrumentality of a foreign
state in the conduct of a commercial activity, or against individuals acting
under color of law, shall be made in accordance with section 1608 of title
28, United States Code.
(d) Enforceability of Judgments Against
Cuban Government.--In an action brought under this section, any judgment
against an agency or instrumentality of the Cuban Government shall not
be enforceable against an agency or instrumentality of either a transition
government in Cuba or a democratically elected government in Cuba.
(e) Certain Property Immune From Execution.--Section
1611 of title 28, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new subsection:
"(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of section
1610 of this chapter, the property of a foreign state shall be immune from
attachment and from execution in an action brought under section 302 of
the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of 1996 to the
extent that the property is a facility or installation used by an accredited
diplomatic mission for official purposes.".
(f) Election of Remedies.--
(1) Election.--Subject to paragraph (2)--
(A) any United States national that brings
an action under this section may not bring any other civil action or proceeding
under the common law, Federal law, or the law of any of the several States,
the District of Columbia, or any commonwealth, territory, or possession
of the United States, that seeks monetary or nonmonetary compensation by
reason of the same subject matter; and
(B) any person who brings, under the common
law or any provision of law other than this section, a civil action or
proceeding for monetary or nonmonetary compensation arising out of a claim
for which an action would otherwise be cognizable under this section may
not bring an action under this section on that claim.
(2) Treatment of certified claimants.--(A)
In the case of any United States national that brings an action under this
section based on a claim certified under title V of the International Claims
Settlement Act of 1949--
(i) if the recovery in the action is equal
to or greater than the amount of the certified claim, the United States
national may not receive payment on the claim under any agreement entered
into between the United States and Cuba settling claims covered by such
title, and such national shall be deemed to have discharged the United
States from any further responsibility to represent the United States national
with respect to that claim;
(ii) if the recovery in the action is less
than the amount of the certified claim, the United States national may
receive payment under a claims agreement described in clause (i) but only
to the extent of the difference between the amount of the recovery and
the amount of the certified claim; and
(iii) if there is no recovery in the action,
the United States national may receive payment on the certified claim under
a claims agreement described in clause (i) to the same extent as any certified
claimant who does not bring an action under this section.
(B) In the event some or all actions brought
under this section are consolidated by judicial or other action in such
manner as to create a pool of assets available to satisfy the claims in
such actions, including a pool of assets in a proceeding in bankruptcy,
every claimant whose claim in an action so consolidated was certified by
the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission under title V of the International
Claims Settlement Act of 1949 shall be entitled to payment in full of its
claim from the assets in such pool before any payment is made from the
assets in such pool with respect to any claim not so certified.
(g) Deposit of Excess Payments by Cuba Under
Claims Agreement.--Any amounts paid by Cuba under any agreement entered
into between the United States and Cuba settling certified claims under
title V of the International Claims Settlement Act of 1949 that are in
excess of the payments made on such certified claims after the application
of subsection (f) shall be deposited into the United States Treasury.
(h) Termination of Rights.--
(1) In general.--All rights created under
this section to bring an action for money damages with respect to property
confiscated by the Cuban Government--
(A) may be suspended under section 204(a);
and
(B) shall cease upon transmittal to the
Congress of a determination of the President under section 203(c)(3) that
a democratically elected government in Cuba is in power.
(2) Pending suits.--The suspension or termination
of rights under paragraph (1) shall not affect suits commenced before the
date of such suspension or termination (as the case may be), and in all
such suits, proceedings shall be had, appeals taken, and judgments rendered
in the same manner and with the same effect as if the suspension or termination
had not occurred.
(i) Imposition of Filing Fees.--The Judicial
Conference of the United States shall establish a uniform fee that shall
be imposed upon the plaintiff or plaintiffs in each action brought under
this section. The fee should be established at a level sufficient to recover
the costs to the courts of actions brought under this section. The fee
under this subsection is in addition to any other fees imposed under title
28, United States Code.
SEC. 303. PROOF OF OWNERSHIP OF CLAIMS TO
CONFISCATED PROPERTY.
(a) Evidence of Ownership.--
(1) Conclusiveness of certified claims.--In
any action brought under this title, the court shall accept as conclusive
proof of ownership of an interest in property a certification of a claim
to ownership of that interest that has been made by the Foreign Claims
Settlement Commission under title V of the International Claims Settlement
Act of 1949 (22 U.S.C. 1643 and following).
(2) Claims not certified.--If in an action
under this title a claim has not been so certified by the Foreign Claims
Settlement Commission, the court may appoint a special master, including
the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission, to make determinations regarding
the amount and ownership of the claim. Such determinations are only for
evidentiary purposes in civil actions brought under this title and do not
constitute certifications under title V of the International Claims Settlement
Act of 1949.
(3) Effect of determinations of foreign
or international entities.-- In determining the amount or ownership of
a claim in an action under this title, the court shall not accept as conclusive
evidence any findings, orders, judgments, or decrees from administrative
agencies or courts of foreign countries or international organizations
that declare the value of or invalidate the claim, unless the declaration
of value or invalidation was found pursuant to binding international arbitration
to which the United States or the claimant submitted the claim.
(b) Amendment of the International Claims
Settlement Act of 1949.--Title V of the International Claims Settlement
Act of 1949 (22 U.S.C. 1643 and following) is amended by adding at the
end the following new section:
"DETERMINATION OF OWNERSHIP OF CLAIMS REFERRED
BY DISTRICT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES
"Sec. 514. Notwithstanding any other provision
of this Act and only for purposes of section 302 of the Cuban Liberty and
Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of 1996, a United State district court,
for fact-finding purposes, may refer to the Commission, and the Commission
may determine, questions of the amount and ownership of a claim by a United
States national (as defined in section 4 of the Cuban Liberty and Democratic
Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of 1996), resulting from the confiscation of
property by the Government of Cuba described in section 503(a), whether
or not the United States national qualified as a national of the United
States (as defined in section 502(1)) at the time of the action by the
Government of Cuba.".
(c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this
Act or in section 514 of the International Claims Settlement Act of 1949,
as added by subsection (b), shall be construed--
(1) to require or otherwise authorize the
claims of Cuban nationals who became United States citizens after their
property was confiscated to be included in the claims certified to the
Secretary of State by the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission for purposes
of future negotiation and espousal of claims with a friendly government
in Cuba when diplomatic relations are restored; or
(2) as superseding, amending, or otherwise
altering certifications that have been made under title V of the International
Claims Settlement Act of 1949 before the date of the enactment of this
Act.
SEC. 304. EXCLUSIVITY OF FOREIGN CLAIMS
SETTLEMENT COMMISSION CERTIFICATION PROCEDURE.
Title V of the International Claims Settlement
Act of 1949 (22 U.S.C. 1643 and following), as amended by section 303,
is further amended by adding at the end the following new section:
"EXCLUSIVITY OF FOREIGN CLAIMS SETTLEMENT
COMMISSION CERTIFICATION PROCEDURE
"Sec. 515. (a) Subject to subsection (b),
neither any national of the United States who was eligible to file a claim
under section 503 but did not timely file such claim under that section,
nor any person who was ineligible to file a claim under section 503, nor
any national of Cuba, including any agency, instrumentality, subdivision,
or enterprise of the Government of Cuba or any local government of Cuba,
nor any successor thereto, whether or not recognized by the United States,
shall have a claim to, participate in, or otherwise have an interest in,
the compensation proceeds or nonmonetary compensation paid or allocated
to a national of the United States by virtue of a claim certified by the
Commission under section 507, nor shall any district court of the United
States have jurisdiction to adjudicate any such claim.
"(b) Nothing in subsection (a) shall be
construed to detract from or otherwise affect any rights in the shares
of capital stock of nationals of the United States owning claims certified
by the Commission under section 507.".
SEC. 305. LIMITATION OF ACTIONS.
An action under section 302 may not be brought
more than 2 years after the trafficking giving rise to the action has ceased
to occur.
SEC. 306. EFFECTIVE DATE.
(a) In General.--Subject to subsections
(b) and (c), this title and the amendments made by this title shall take
effect on August 1, 1996.
(b) Suspension Authority.--
(1) Suspension authority.--The President
may suspend the effective date under subsection (a) for a period of not
more than 6 months if the President determines and reports in writing to
the appropriate congressional committees at least 15 days before such effective
date that the suspension is necessary to the national interests of the
United States and will expedite a transition to democracy in Cuba.
(2) Additional suspensions.--The President
may suspend the effective date under subsection (a) for additional periods
of not more than 6 months each, each of which shall begin on the day after
the last day of the period during which a suspension is in effect under
this subsection, if the President determines and reports in writing to
the appropriate congressional committees at least 15 days before the date
on which the additional suspension is to begin that the suspension is necessary
to the national interests of the United States and will expedite a transition
to democracy in Cuba.
(c) Other Authorities.--
(1) Suspension.--After this title and the
amendments of this title have taken effect--
(A) no person shall acquire a property interest
in any potential or pending action under this title; and
(B) the President may suspend the right
to bring an action under this title with respect to confiscated property
for a period of not more than 6 months if the President determines and
reports in writing to the appropriate congressional committees at least
15 days before the suspension takes effect that such suspension is necessary
to the national interests of the United States and will expedite a transition
to democracy in Cuba.
(2) Additional suspensions.--The President
may suspend the right to bring an action under this title for additional
periods of not more than 6 months each, each of which shall begin on the
day after the last day of the period during which a suspension is in effect
under this subsection, if the President determines and reports in writing
to the appropriate congressional committees at least 15 days before the
date on which the additional suspension is to begin that the suspension
is necessary to the national interests of the United States and will expedite
a transition to democracy in Cuba.
(3) Pending suits.--The suspensions of actions
under paragraph (1) shall not affect suits commenced before the date of
such suspension, and in all such suits, proceedings shall be had, appeals
taken, and judgments rendered in the same manner and with the same effect
as if the suspension had not occurred.
(d) Rescission of Suspension.--The President
may rescind any suspension made under subsection (b) or (c) upon reporting
to the appropriate congressional committees that doing so will expedite
a transition to democracy in Cuba.
TITLE IV--EXCLUSION OF CERTAIN ALIENS
SEC. 401. EXCLUSION FROM THE UNITED STATES
OF ALIENS WHO HAVE CONFISCATED PROPERTY OF UNITED STATES NATIONALS OR WHO
TRAFFIC IN SUCH PROPERTY.
(a) Grounds for Exclusion.--The Secretary
of State shall deny a visa to, and the Attorney General shall exclude from
the United States, any alien who the Secretary of State determines is a
person who, after the date of the enactment of this Act--
(1) has confiscated, or has directed or
overseen the confiscation of, property a claim to which is owned by a United
States national, or converts or has converted for personal gain confiscated
property, a claim to which is owned by a United States national;
(2) traffics in confiscated property, a
claim to which is owned by a United States national;
(3) is a corporate officer, principal, or
shareholder with a controlling interest of an entity which has been involved
in the confiscation of property or trafficking in confiscated property,
a claim to which is owned by a United States national; or
(4) is a spouse, minor child, or agent of
a person excludable under paragraph (1), (2), or (3).
(b) Definitions.--As used in this section,
the following terms have the following meanings:
(1) Confiscated; confiscation.--The terms
"confiscated" and "confiscation" refer to--
(A) the nationalization, expropriation,
or other seizure by the Cuban Government of ownership or control of property--
(i) without the property having been returned
or adequate and effective compensation provided; or
(ii) without the claim to the property having
been settled pursuant to an international claims settlement agreement or
other mutually accepted settlement procedure; and
(B) the repudiation by the Cuban Government
of, the default by the Cuban Government on, or the failure of the Cuban
Government to pay--
(i) a debt of any enterprise which has been
nationalized, expropriated, or otherwise taken by the Cuban Government;
(ii) a debt which is a charge on property
nationalized, expropriated, or otherwise taken by the Cuban Government;
or
(iii) a debt which was incurred by the Cuban
Government in satisfaction or settlement of a confiscated property claim.
(2) Traffics.--(A) Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), a person "traffics" in confiscated property if that person
knowingly and intentionally--
(i)(I) transfers, distributes, dispenses,
brokers, or otherwise disposes of confiscated property,
(II) purchases, receives, obtains control
of, or otherwise acquires confiscated property, or
(III) improves (other than for routine maintenance),
invests in (by contribution of funds or anything of value, other than for
routine maintenance), or begins after the date of the enactment of this
Act to manage, lease, possess, use, or hold an interest in confiscated
property,
(ii) enters into a commercial arrangement
using or otherwise benefiting from confiscated property, or
(iii) causes, directs, participates in,
or profits from, trafficking (as described in clause (i) or (ii)) by another
person, or otherwise engages in trafficking (as described in clause (i)
or (ii)) through another person,
without the authorization of any United
States national who holds a claim to the property.
(B) The term "traffics" does not include--
(i) the delivery of international telecommunication
signals to Cuba;
(ii) the trading or holding of securities
publicly traded or held, unless the trading is with or by a person determined
by the Secretary of the Treasury to be a specially designated national;
(iii) transactions and uses of property
incident to lawful travel to Cuba, to the extent that such transactions
and uses of property are necessary to the conduct of such travel; or
(iv) transactions and uses of property by
a person who is both a citizen of Cuba and a resident of Cuba, and who
is not an official of the Cuban Government or the ruling political party
in Cuba.
(c) Exemption.--This section shall not apply
where the Secretary of State finds, on a case by case basis, that the entry
into the United States of the person who would otherwise be excluded under
this section is necessary for medical reasons or for purposes of litigation
of an action under title III.
(d) Effective Date.--
(1) In general.--This section applies to
aliens seeking to enter the United States on or after the date of the enactment
of this Act.
(2) Trafficking.--This section applies only
with respect to acts within the meaning of "traffics" that occur on or
after the date of the enactment of this Act.
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Vice President of the United States and
President of the Senate.
|