Discussion:
Vargas Llosa llama al Gobierno de Zapatero "social pendejo" y "puta triste" de Castro
(demasiado antiguo para responder)
PL
2004-11-08 17:18:45 UTC
Permalink
Domingo 7 de noviembre, 7:36 PM
España/Cuba/Perú: Vargas Llosa llama al Gobierno de Zapatero "social
pendejo" y "puta triste" de Castro




En una velada alusión a la última novela de Gabriel García Márquez,
'Memorias de mis putas tristes', el escritor peruano Mario Vargas Llosa
pidió que se impida que España se convierta en la "puta triste de Fidel"
Castro y criticó al Gobierno de José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, al que
calificó de "social pendejo" por promover un acercamiento entre la Unión
Europea (UE) y Cuba.

En el artículo 'Piedra de toque', publicado por el diario mexicano 'La
Reforma', Vargas Llosa denuncia entre otras cosas los "encarcelamientos
masivos", la "represión sistemática, brutal y desproporcionada", los
"juicios grotescos" y la "pena de muerte" en Cuba.

Además, destaca que "el Gobierno español de Rodríguez Zapatero acaba de
hacer pública su decisión de apandillar un movimiento para que la Unión
Europea, que, luego de los fusilamientos y condenas a los 75 disidentes
había optado por una política de firmeza ante la dictadura cubana mientras
no hubiera progresos reales en la isla en materia de derechos humanos,
rectifique y opte más bien por el acercamiento y el diáloogo amistoso con
Castro, es decir, por cortar toda vinculación y apoyo a sus opositores".

Vargas Llosa califica términos como "acercamiento", "diálogo" o "diplomacia
privada" de "eufemismos mentirosos" que ocultan una "abdicación vergonzosa
de un Gobierno que, en clara contradicción con sus orígenes y su naturaleza
democrática decide contribuir a la supervivencia de una dictadura como la de
Franco, y una puñalada trapera a los innumerables cubanos que, como los
millones de españoles bajo el franquismo, sueñan con vivir en un país sin
censuras".

Para el escritor peruano, la postura de Madrid es una "bocanada de oxígeno"
para el régimen de Castro y muestra que el socialismo español está "muy
rezagado" con respecto al de países como Francia, Reino Unido, Alemania o
los países nórdicos, "donde los socialistas no tiene ningún complejo de
inferioridad frente al Gulag tropical cubano".

Por último, señala que los "social pendejos" realizan un "acto demagógico e
irresponsable" que "sólo servirá para apuntalar a la más longeva dictadura
latinoamericana". "No debemos permitir que la España democrática, moderna y
europea que en tantos sentidos en un ejemplo para América Latina se
convierta en la 'puta triste' de Fidel".


http://ar.news.yahoo.com/041107/11/daer.html
pedro martori
2004-11-08 17:34:50 UTC
Permalink
WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite the Bush administration's pledge to battle terrorist financing, the government's average penalty against companies doing business with countries listed as terrorist-sponsoring states fell sharply after the Sept. 11 attacks, an Associated Press analysis of federal records shows.

The average penalty for a company doing business with Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Sudan or Libya dropped nearly threefold, from more than $50,000 in the five years before the 2001 attacks to about $18,700 afterward, according to a computer-assisted analysis of federal records.
In spite of his campaign rethoric, there are no figures about Cuba.

After the attacks, Bush grouped North Korea, Iran and Saddam Hussein's Iraq together as an ``axis of evil'' countries with both weapons of mass destruction and links to terrorists.

A Treasury Department spokeswoman said that despite the smaller average fines, the administration was doing a good job of enforcing economic penalties against nations considered sponsors of terrorism. Molly Millerwise said the department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, ``is committed to ensuring that U.S. entities abide by U.S. sanction laws. We are not in the business of making money.''

The smaller average fines could indicate that companies are making fewer large deals with terrorist countries, said Adam Pener, who advises businesses on how to avoid dealing with terrorist nations.

``I would argue this is a good sign OFAC is doing its job,'' said Pener, chief operating officer of the Conflict Securities Advisory Group. ``OFAC in a lot of ways is a deterrent. Especially in the post-9-11 era, companies are policing themselves a lot more.''

Vice President Dick Cheney was a vocal critic of trade embargoes while he headed Halliburton, a Houston-based oil services conglomerate, from 1995 to 2000. Under Cheney, Halliburton expanded its trade with Iran through an offshore subsidiary. That arrangement is now being investigated by a federal grand jury.

Nineteen executives or directors of companies fined by OFAC for dealing with state sponsors of terrorism were top campaign fund-raisers for Bush.

One example is Joseph J. Grano Jr., chairman of the federal Homeland Security Advisory Council, which the president created by executive order and whose members he selected. Grano formerly headed the U.S. subsidiary of the Swiss bank UBS AG. It paid more than $100 million in fines for trading U.S. currency to Iran and other nations and for transferring funds to Iraq during Saddam's rule.

Bush renewed the ban on trade with Iran in March 2001. Since Sept. 11, 2001, the Treasury Department has added hundreds of names to the list of people and businesses whose U.S. assets are frozen because of suspected links to terrorism. The department also has traced terrorist financing and seized more than $200 million in terrorist assets.

OFAC is the agency that enforces U.S. restrictions on trade with drug traffickers, terrorists and countries on the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism. Part of that job involves investigating and punishing companies that have outlawed transactions with such countries, organizations or individuals.

U.S. laws such as the Trading With the Enemy Act prohibit most trade with those designated countries: Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Cuba. Libya was on the list until this year, after its government agreed to disclose and dismantle its clandestine nuclear and chemical weapons programs.

The Bush administration also removed Iraq from the banned list this year after the U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam.

The AP used publicly available OFAC records to compile a database of penalties paid by companies for doing business with terrorists or their state sponsors. The database includes entries for more than 500 such cases since 1996.

Analysis of the database showed average penalties for violating the embargoes fell for every terrorism-sponsoring country after the attacks:

Believe or not, the average corporate penalty for doing business with Cuba was four times higher before the attacks. The pre-attack average penalty was nearly $98,000; the post-attack average was about $23,500. The State Department accuses Cuba of bankrolling some terrorist groups and sheltering members of IRA, Basque, Colombian and other terrorist organizations.

Penalties for prohibited business involving Iran were nearly twice as high before the attacks. The pre-attack average penalty for an Iran transaction was more than $33,500; the post-attack average fine was about $17,300.

Fines for trading with Iraq while Saddam was in power averaged more than $101,000 before the Sept. 11 attacks, then fell by more than a third to about $74,800 afterward.

Companies accused of dealing with Libya paid fines averaging more than $41,000 before the attacks, a figure more than three times higher than the postattack average of about $12,800.

There was only one fine since 2001 involving a deal with North Korea. It was for prohibited transactions from the 1990s. The State Department says North Korea shelters members of Japanese terrorist groups, although the communist North is not known to have sponsored any terrorist acts since the 1987 bombing of a Korean Air Lines flight by North Korean agents.

The Treasury Department previously had kept most of OFAC's fines secret. The office released documents detailing its enforcement cases in 2002 under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit and agreed to begin posting monthly lists of companies which paid penalties. That process began in April 2003.

The AP database includes all penalties detailed in those documents but does not include fines assessed for deals solely involving drug traffickers or embargoed countries not directly linked to terrorism such as Yugoslavia and Haiti.

OFAC does not release information detailing fines against individuals accused of violating the embargoes. Those fines also were not included in the AP database.


lavozdecubalibre.com


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pedro martori
2004-11-08 17:39:35 UTC
Permalink
KASSTRO Y SU PANDILLA SON LOS UNICOS QUE PUEDEN USAR DOLARES AMERICANOS.

KASSTRO Y SU PANDILLA SON LOS UNICOS QUE PUEDEN USAR DOLARES AMERICANOS.
El gobierno de Fidel Castro en Cuba informó el jueves que se extendió por una semana el plazo para el intercambio de dólares estadounidenses por pesos cubanos convertibles conocidos como "chavitos"*.

Castro recientemente anunció que la moneda estadounidense no podrá
circular más dentro de la isla y ser usada, como era posible hasta
hace pocos días atrás. Solo el gobierno y sus funcionarios podran poseer dolares legalmente. Desde la epoca en que Ernesto Guevara, alias, el "Che" fue Presidente del Banco Central de Cuba, el peso cubano dejo de tener valor con motivo de la desaparicion de las reservas que Cuba tenia para respaldar su moneda.

Con el nuevo plazo, a partir del próximo 15 de noviembre, el dólar
no podrá circular en la isla, a pesar de que la mayoria de los productos tendran su costo en la moneda extranjera.. Solo los extranjeros podran continuar pagando con dolares, aunque son alentados a que los cambios por los "chavitos".

Todo dólar que ingrese a Cuba deberá ser cambiado a peso convertible
cubano, con una valoración reducida del 10%.

Es decir, por cada dólar serán entregados 0.90 centavos de peso
cubano, una nueva moneda que comenzará a circular en la isla y que
en una cara tendrá el rostro de Ernesto "Ché" Guevara y en la otra
el escudo nacional. Hace varios años el gobierno cubano emitio billetes con el valor de tres pesos, con la cara del aventurero argentino.

Por otro lado el presidente de la Asamblea Nacional de la dictadura
en Cuba, Ricardo Alarcón, advirtió que anticipa un endurecimiento de
la política estadounidense hacia el régimen tras la reelección del
presidente George W. Bush.

Bush "se considera ahora, como finalmente lo eligieron, con un
mandato para aplicar esa política", señaló el vocero de Fidel
Castro.

Alarcón agregó que el líder estadounidense "ha estado apretando y
apretando la tuerca, sin exito" contra la vieja dictadura.

La elección del primer senador estadounidense de origen cubano, Mel
Martínez, unido a los cuagro representantes que ya habia, da como resultado un total de cinco congresistas cubanos que podría alentar aún más el endurecimiento de la política de Washington hacia el castrismo.

Martínez formó parte de la comisión del gobierno estadounidense que
recomendó el endurecimiento sobre la dictadura castrofidelista que
se puso en práctica al comienzo de este año.

Con información de agencias internacionales de prensa.

* Chavitos - Moneda infantil cubana para jugar. Similar a la usada en los juegos de Monopolio.

lavozdecubalibre.com


WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite the Bush administration's pledge to battle terrorist financing, the government's average penalty against companies doing business with countries listed as terrorist-sponsoring states fell sharply after the Sept. 11 attacks, an Associated Press analysis of federal records shows.

The average penalty for a company doing business with Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Sudan or Libya dropped nearly threefold, from more than $50,000 in the five years before the 2001 attacks to about $18,700 afterward, according to a computer-assisted analysis of federal records.
In spite of his campaign rethoric, there are no figures about Cuba.

After the attacks, Bush grouped North Korea, Iran and Saddam Hussein's Iraq together as an ``axis of evil'' countries with both weapons of mass destruction and links to terrorists.

A Treasury Department spokeswoman said that despite the smaller average fines, the administration was doing a good job of enforcing economic penalties against nations considered sponsors of terrorism. Molly Millerwise said the department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, ``is committed to ensuring that U.S. entities abide by U.S. sanction laws. We are not in the business of making money.''

The smaller average fines could indicate that companies are making fewer large deals with terrorist countries, said Adam Pener, who advises businesses on how to avoid dealing with terrorist nations.

``I would argue this is a good sign OFAC is doing its job,'' said Pener, chief operating officer of the Conflict Securities Advisory Group. ``OFAC in a lot of ways is a deterrent. Especially in the post-9-11 era, companies are policing themselves a lot more.''

Vice President Dick Cheney was a vocal critic of trade embargoes while he headed Halliburton, a Houston-based oil services conglomerate, from 1995 to 2000. Under Cheney, Halliburton expanded its trade with Iran through an offshore subsidiary. That arrangement is now being investigated by a federal grand jury.

Nineteen executives or directors of companies fined by OFAC for dealing with state sponsors of terrorism were top campaign fund-raisers for Bush.

One example is Joseph J. Grano Jr., chairman of the federal Homeland Security Advisory Council, which the president created by executive order and whose members he selected. Grano formerly headed the U.S. subsidiary of the Swiss bank UBS AG. It paid more than $100 million in fines for trading U.S. currency to Iran and other nations and for transferring funds to Iraq during Saddam's rule.

Bush renewed the ban on trade with Iran in March 2001. Since Sept. 11, 2001, the Treasury Department has added hundreds of names to the list of people and businesses whose U.S. assets are frozen because of suspected links to terrorism. The department also has traced terrorist financing and seized more than $200 million in terrorist assets.

OFAC is the agency that enforces U.S. restrictions on trade with drug traffickers, terrorists and countries on the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism. Part of that job involves investigating and punishing companies that have outlawed transactions with such countries, organizations or individuals.

U.S. laws such as the Trading With the Enemy Act prohibit most trade with those designated countries: Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Cuba. Libya was on the list until this year, after its government agreed to disclose and dismantle its clandestine nuclear and chemical weapons programs.

The Bush administration also removed Iraq from the banned list this year after the U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam.

The AP used publicly available OFAC records to compile a database of penalties paid by companies for doing business with terrorists or their state sponsors. The database includes entries for more than 500 such cases since 1996.

Analysis of the database showed average penalties for violating the embargoes fell for every terrorism-sponsoring country after the attacks:

Believe or not, the average corporate penalty for doing business with Cuba was four times higher before the attacks. The pre-attack average penalty was nearly $98,000; the post-attack average was about $23,500. The State Department accuses Cuba of bankrolling some terrorist groups and sheltering members of IRA, Basque, Colombian and other terrorist organizations.

Penalties for prohibited business involving Iran were nearly twice as high before the attacks. The pre-attack average penalty for an Iran transaction was more than $33,500; the post-attack average fine was about $17,300.

Fines for trading with Iraq while Saddam was in power averaged more than $101,000 before the Sept. 11 attacks, then fell by more than a third to about $74,800 afterward.

Companies accused of dealing with Libya paid fines averaging more than $41,000 before the attacks, a figure more than three times higher than the postattack average of about $12,800.

There was only one fine since 2001 involving a deal with North Korea. It was for prohibited transactions from the 1990s. The State Department says North Korea shelters members of Japanese terrorist groups, although the communist North is not known to have sponsored any terrorist acts since the 1987 bombing of a Korean Air Lines flight by North Korean agents.

The Treasury Department previously had kept most of OFAC's fines secret. The office released documents detailing its enforcement cases in 2002 under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit and agreed to begin posting monthly lists of companies which paid penalties. That process began in April 2003.

The AP database includes all penalties detailed in those documents but does not include fines assessed for deals solely involving drug traffickers or embargoed countries not directly linked to terrorism such as Yugoslavia and Haiti.

OFAC does not release information detailing fines against individuals accused of violating the embargoes. Those fines also were not included in the AP database.


lavozdecubalibre.com


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pedro martori
2004-11-08 17:53:26 UTC
Permalink
American University Law Dean, Students, Alumni Bring Case against Cuba Before OAS Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Oct. 27

Contact: Felipe Sixto, Chief of Staff, Center for a Free Cuba, 202-463-8430 -- WASHINGTON, D.C. (Oct. 27, 2004) – American University Washington College of Law, Dean Claudio Grossman, Chief of Staff of the Center for a Free Cuba, Felipe Sixto, and a group of (WCL) students and alumni brought a case to the OAS’ Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. The case is on behalf of three Cuban nationals, executed without due process of law, and in violation of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man (1948).

On April 2, 2003, a group of Cuban nationals hijacked a ferry in an attempt to flee to the United States. Thirty miles from the Cuban shore, the ferry ran out of gas and the vessel was reclaimed by Cuban authorities, and the hijackers surrendered and were arrested. On April 5, the defendants were brought to trial; and on April 11, after a closed trial, in which the Cuban defendants were not permitted to choose their own legal representatives, three of the suspects, Lorenzo Enrique Copello Castillo, Barbaro Leodan Sevilla Garcia and Jorge Luis Martinez Isaac were executed by firing squad. Just one week had elapsed since they surrendered to authorities.


“This case is an egregious violation of due process of law,” said Claudio Grossman. “It is important that the Commission hold Cuba accountable for violations of the American Declaration, to which it agreed more than 50 years ago. At WCL we will continue to take cases like this, in which we can offer our expertise to promote and protect human rights. We reject the notion that we should be silent spectators of such outrageous violations.”


“In Cuba, human rights abuses have worsened dramatically,” said Felipe Sixto. “Last year along with the three young black men who were executed, 75 peaceful dissidents were sentenced to prison terms of up to 28 years for trying to exercise their fundamental rights." “The Cuban Government must be held accountable for its human rights violations and its lack of legal safeguards.”


Grossman and the team have taken the case pro bono and will donate 100 percent of any reasonable legal fees awarded by the Commission to a fund to assist victims of human rights abuses in Cuba. They are requesting that the Commission: find that the executions violated the American Declaration; investigate and hold accountable the responsible individuals; and award compensation to the victims’ families.


In addition to Claudio Grossman and Felipe Eduardo Sixto, the full legal team includes: Jennifer de Laurentiis; Helen Jimenez and Courtney Nogar.


lavozdecubalibre.com


KASSTRO Y SU PANDILLA SON LOS UNICOS QUE PUEDEN USAR DOLARES AMERICANOS.

KASSTRO Y SU PANDILLA SON LOS UNICOS QUE PUEDEN USAR DOLARES AMERICANOS.
El gobierno de Fidel Castro en Cuba inform� el jueves que se extendi� por una semana el plazo para el intercambio de d�lares estadounidenses por pesos cubanos convertibles conocidos como "chavitos"*.

Castro recientemente anunci� que la moneda estadounidense no podr�
circular m�s dentro de la isla y ser usada, como era posible hasta
hace pocos d�as atr�s. Solo el gobierno y sus funcionarios podran poseer dolares legalmente. Desde la epoca en que Ernesto Guevara, alias, el "Che" fue Presidente del Banco Central de Cuba, el peso cubano dejo de tener valor con motivo de la desaparicion de las reservas que Cuba tenia para respaldar su moneda.

Con el nuevo plazo, a partir del pr�ximo 15 de noviembre, el d�lar
no podr� circular en la isla, a pesar de que la mayoria de los productos tendran su costo en la moneda extranjera.. Solo los extranjeros podran continuar pagando con dolares, aunque son alentados a que los cambios por los "chavitos".

Todo d�lar que ingrese a Cuba deber� ser cambiado a peso convertible
cubano, con una valoraci�n reducida del 10%.

Es decir, por cada d�lar ser�n entregados 0.90 centavos de peso
cubano, una nueva moneda que comenzar� a circular en la isla y que
en una cara tendr� el rostro de Ernesto "Ch�" Guevara y en la otra
el escudo nacional. Hace varios a�os el gobierno cubano emitio billetes con el valor de tres pesos, con la cara del aventurero argentino.

Por otro lado el presidente de la Asamblea Nacional de la dictadura
en Cuba, Ricardo Alarc�n, advirti� que anticipa un endurecimiento de
la pol�tica estadounidense hacia el r�gimen tras la reelecci�n del
presidente George W. Bush.

Bush "se considera ahora, como finalmente lo eligieron, con un
mandato para aplicar esa pol�tica", se�al� el vocero de Fidel
Castro.

Alarc�n agreg� que el l�der estadounidense "ha estado apretando y
apretando la tuerca, sin exito" contra la vieja dictadura.

La elecci�n del primer senador estadounidense de origen cubano, Mel
Mart�nez, unido a los cuagro representantes que ya habia, da como resultado un total de cinco congresistas cubanos que podr�a alentar a�n m�s el endurecimiento de la pol�tica de Washington hacia el castrismo.

Mart�nez form� parte de la comisi�n del gobierno estadounidense que
recomend� el endurecimiento sobre la dictadura castrofidelista que
se puso en pr�ctica al comienzo de este a�o.

Con informaci�n de agencias internacionales de prensa.

* Chavitos - Moneda infantil cubana para jugar. Similar a la usada en los juegos de Monopolio.

lavozdecubalibre.com


WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite the Bush administration's pledge to battle terrorist financing, the government's average penalty against companies doing business with countries listed as terrorist-sponsoring states fell sharply after the Sept. 11 attacks, an Associated Press analysis of federal records shows.

The average penalty for a company doing business with Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Sudan or Libya dropped nearly threefold, from more than $50,000 in the five years before the 2001 attacks to about $18,700 afterward, according to a computer-assisted analysis of federal records.
In spite of his campaign rethoric, there are no figures about Cuba.

After the attacks, Bush grouped North Korea, Iran and Saddam Hussein's Iraq together as an ``axis of evil'' countries with both weapons of mass destruction and links to terrorists.

A Treasury Department spokeswoman said that despite the smaller average fines, the administration was doing a good job of enforcing economic penalties against nations considered sponsors of terrorism. Molly Millerwise said the department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, ``is committed to ensuring that U.S. entities abide by U.S. sanction laws. We are not in the business of making money.''

The smaller average fines could indicate that companies are making fewer large deals with terrorist countries, said Adam Pener, who advises businesses on how to avoid dealing with terrorist nations.

``I would argue this is a good sign OFAC is doing its job,'' said Pener, chief operating officer of the Conflict Securities Advisory Group. ``OFAC in a lot of ways is a deterrent. Especially in the post-9-11 era, companies are policing themselves a lot more.''

Vice President Dick Cheney was a vocal critic of trade embargoes while he headed Halliburton, a Houston-based oil services conglomerate, from 1995 to 2000. Under Cheney, Halliburton expanded its trade with Iran through an offshore subsidiary. That arrangement is now being investigated by a federal grand jury.

Nineteen executives or directors of companies fined by OFAC for dealing with state sponsors of terrorism were top campaign fund-raisers for Bush.

One example is Joseph J. Grano Jr., chairman of the federal Homeland Security Advisory Council, which the president created by executive order and whose members he selected. Grano formerly headed the U.S. subsidiary of the Swiss bank UBS AG. It paid more than $100 million in fines for trading U.S. currency to Iran and other nations and for transferring funds to Iraq during Saddam's rule.

Bush renewed the ban on trade with Iran in March 2001. Since Sept. 11, 2001, the Treasury Department has added hundreds of names to the list of people and businesses whose U.S. assets are frozen because of suspected links to terrorism. The department also has traced terrorist financing and seized more than $200 million in terrorist assets.

OFAC is the agency that enforces U.S. restrictions on trade with drug traffickers, terrorists and countries on the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism. Part of that job involves investigating and punishing companies that have outlawed transactions with such countries, organizations or individuals.

U.S. laws such as the Trading With the Enemy Act prohibit most trade with those designated countries: Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Cuba. Libya was on the list until this year, after its government agreed to disclose and dismantle its clandestine nuclear and chemical weapons programs.

The Bush administration also removed Iraq from the banned list this year after the U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam.

The AP used publicly available OFAC records to compile a database of penalties paid by companies for doing business with terrorists or their state sponsors. The database includes entries for more than 500 such cases since 1996.

Analysis of the database showed average penalties for violating the embargoes fell for every terrorism-sponsoring country after the attacks:

Believe or not, the average corporate penalty for doing business with Cuba was four times higher before the attacks. The pre-attack average penalty was nearly $98,000; the post-attack average was about $23,500. The State Department accuses Cuba of bankrolling some terrorist groups and sheltering members of IRA, Basque, Colombian and other terrorist organizations.

Penalties for prohibited business involving Iran were nearly twice as high before the attacks. The pre-attack average penalty for an Iran transaction was more than $33,500; the post-attack average fine was about $17,300.

Fines for trading with Iraq while Saddam was in power averaged more than $101,000 before the Sept. 11 attacks, then fell by more than a third to about $74,800 afterward.

Companies accused of dealing with Libya paid fines averaging more than $41,000 before the attacks, a figure more than three times higher than the postattack average of about $12,800.

There was only one fine since 2001 involving a deal with North Korea. It was for prohibited transactions from the 1990s. The State Department says North Korea shelters members of Japanese terrorist groups, although the communist North is not known to have sponsored any terrorist acts since the 1987 bombing of a Korean Air Lines flight by North Korean agents.

The Treasury Department previously had kept most of OFAC's fines secret. The office released documents detailing its enforcement cases in 2002 under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit and agreed to begin posting monthly lists of companies which paid penalties. That process began in April 2003.

The AP database includes all penalties detailed in those documents but does not include fines assessed for deals solely involving drug traffickers or embargoed countries not directly linked to terrorism such as Yugoslavia and Haiti.

OFAC does not release information detailing fines against individuals accused of violating the embargoes. Those fines also were not included in the AP database.


lavozdecubalibre.com


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