EU and Cuba sign deal to normalise ties

havana club [zoonabar/Flickr]

The EU and Cuba signed a deal Friday to normalise relations, including a deal on the delicate issue of human rights – a breakthrough just ahead of US President Barack Obama’s historic visit to the island.

EU and Cuban officials signed the agreement, the culmination of nearly two years of intense negotiations, during a visit to Havana by European foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini.

“This is a historic step in our relationship,” Mogherini said.

Mogherini plans Cuba visit as accord nears

The European Union’s foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini is set to visit Cuba next week for talks that could finalize an agreement on normalizing relations, Havana said on Thursday (3 March).

The EU had suspended relations with Cuba in 2003 over a crackdown on journalists and activists, and had since 1996 officially used its foreign policy to encourage human rights advances in the country.

That so-called “common position” was vehemently rejected by Havana as interference in its internal affairs.

“This accord marks the end of the common position,” said Mogherini at the signing ceremony.

The EU had said it was seeking a more constructive approach to engage Havana and persuade President Raul Castro’s government to sign several international human rights treaties.

Cuba was previously the only country in Latin America without an international cooperation deal with the EU.

The two sides began talks on restoring ties in April 2014.

They had moved to accelerate the process after Cuba and the United States announced a historic rapprochement in December 2014 and renewed diplomatic relations in July.

Obama will visit Cuba from March 20 to 22 – the first visit by a US president since 1928, and a symbolically charged capstone to the rapprochement that ended more than half a century of hostility rooted in the Cold War.

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