Farmers look to Cuba as market
by Jay Hughes
The Associated Press
AUBURN, Ill. - Garry Niemeyer has his eye on a new
market for the corn and soybeans he grows on his Illinois farm - a
hungry country not much farther away than a barge ride down the Mississippi
River.
For 40 years, Cuba has seemed a world away to farmers such as Niemeyer
and other American businessmen because of the U.S. trade embargo against
the communist country 90 miles off Florida.
"When we have a market that's this close, it's a shame not to
utilize it to the fullest extent," Niemeyer said. "The potential
is overwhelming."
Politicians from farm states, led in part by Republican Gov. George
Ryan and his two icebreaking trips to Cuba, are putting increasing
pressure on the Bush administration to ease the sanctions. And Fidel
Castro has signaled a willingness to do business.
Trade sanctions were instituted in the 1960s and tightened in 1992.
They were softened in 2000, when a law was passed allowing direct
sales of food to Cuba for cash.
Havana did not take advantage of the eased regulations until Hurricane
Michelle swept the island in November. After that, Cuba signed $35
million in contracts for cash purchases of American corn, rice, wheat,
poultry and other food. The first shipment of grain from seven states
arrived in December.
At the time, Castro indicated it would be a one-time deal. But lately
he has signaled a willingness to buy more if Washington would allow
sales on credit.
Ryan - whose state is No. 2 in corn and soybean production and home
to two of the world's biggest tractor manufacturers, John Deere and
Caterpillar - said Cuba is too poor to spend much currency overseas,
and he backs credit sales.
Illinois economic development officials believe free trade could
bring the United States up to $1 billion in agricultural business
with Cuba, including the sale of food and equipment.
"The embargo has been on for 40 years, and it hasn't done a
bit of good," Ryan said in a recent interview. "It's a political
issue, but time heals a lot of things, and it's been 40 years."
Resistance to free trade with Cuba remains strong. President Bush
has called the sanctions "a moral statement" and insists
that U.S.-Cuba relations will not improve until Cuba embraces democracy
and human rights.