Yahoo – AFP,
Lachlan Carmichael
EU foreign
affairs head Federica Mogherini speaks with journalists after
a working meeting
at the Foreign Affairs Ministry in Paris on March 7, 2015
(AFP Photo/Eric
Feferberg)
|
Brussels
(AFP) - EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini is to visit Cuba later this
month in a bid to spur talks aimed at normalising ties with the Communist-led
island state, the first such trip by a top EU diplomat.
The planned
visit appears to mark a further thaw in relations between Cuba and the West,
especially after the dramatic rapprochement between Havana and Washington in
the last few months.
Mogherini
will meet Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez on the March 23-24 visit to
Havana which "comes at a crucial time" for negotiations between the
two sides, her office said in a statement Saturday.
EU foreign
affairs head Federica
Mogherini speaks with journalists
after a working meeting
at the
Foreign Affairs Ministry in Paris on
March 7, 2015 (AFP Photo/Eric
Feferberg)
|
The meeting
between the top diplomats aims at giving a shot in the arm to the talks that
began some 11 months ago.
The EU and
Cuba held a third round of talks between chief negotiators at the beginning of March
aimed at tackling sensitive human rights issues and finalising an agreement
"on political dialogue and cooperation," meant to turn the page on a
decade of estrangement.
The talks
marked the first meeting between the 28-country EU and Havana since the United
States and Cuba surprised the world by announcing in December that they would
move to restore relations after half a century.
- 'New
opportunities for all' -
"The
EU has been closely following the developments in Cuba and its relations with
key international players, which create new dynamics in the region and in Cuba
itself, and provide new opportunities for all," Mogherini said.
Besides
Rodriguez, Mogherini is due to meet other Cuban government officials as well as
the archbishop of Havana, Cardinal Jaime Ortega, and civil society
representatives.
The two sides
will discuss developments in the country and "perspectives" for
cooperation, Mogherini's office said.
In 2014,
the EU launched its normalisation process with the Americas' only communist
nation to encourage President Raul Castro to pursue reforms allowing for
private initiatives without changing the one-party political system.
The
negotiating sessions earlier this month, initially scheduled for January, had
been postponed by Cuba just before the thaw with Washington was announced.
The EU
hailed the move, calling it a historic turning point. However, Spain in January
urged the EU to speed up its process of normalisation to not lose ground to
Washington, particularly on trade.
Since 1996,
EU policy toward Cuba has been guided by the so-called Common Position, which
rules out full relations with Havana until it makes reforms in areas such as
more diverse political participation and freedom of expression.
The EU
suspended talks with Cuba in 2003 after Havana launched a crackdown and jailed
75 dissidents in a direct response to calls for liberalisation and greater
respect for human rights.
The EU
began lifting some sanctions unilaterally in 2008, the year Fidel Castro
retired from the presidency permanently and power passed to his younger brother
Raul.
Mogherini's
statement said her visit is the first one to Cuba conducted by an EU high
representative, which is Mogherini's formal title.
EU
officials told AFP that Mogherini had met Rodriguez on the sidelines of a
meeting of Community of Latin American and Caribbean States a few weeks ago.
They added
that Mogherini's predecessor Catherine Ashton had met Rodriguez in Brussels a
few years ago.
President
Francois Hollande is to visit the island May 11 in what will be the first trip
by a French head of state to Cuba.
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