Carnival sued in US over seized property in Cuba, in a first

Ships from the Carnival cruise line are seen in Nassau, Bahamas (AFP Photo/Daniel SLIM)

Miami (AFP) – Carnival, the US cruise line, was sued Thursday over its use of port facilities in Cuba seized after the 1959 revolution, in the first such action under a previously unenforced US law.

President Donald Trump’s administration announced last month it would begin enforcing a controversial provision of the 1996 Helms-Burton Act allowing Cuban-Americans to sue in US courts over property confiscated by Cuba.

The US decision, which went into effect Thursday, is expected to set in motion a flood of US lawsuits against foreign companies who do business in Cuba.

The lawsuit against Florida-based Carnival was filed early Thursday, Bob Martinez, the lawyer for plaintiffs Javier Garcia Bengochea and Mickael Behn, said.

They are seeking compensation for Carnival’s use of port facilities in Santiago de Cuba and Havana that they claim were improperly seized from their families by the regime of Fidel Castro.

Carnival “was the first cruise line to benefit from our stolen property, so they deserve the ignominious distinction of being the first to be sued under this law,” said Bengochea, who claims to be the legitimate owner of the port of Santiago.

Behn asserts ownership rights over piers in Havana.

“In the 1960s, the Castro brothers and their Communist Party friends stole the property of my grandfather,” he said. “We can finally get justice after 60 years.”

By activating Title III of the Helms-Burton Act, the US administration is seeking to weaken the Cuban government by scaring off foreign investors.

The European Union and Canada have expressed displeasure with the move, insisting they will protect their nationals’ interests.

“There will be hundreds of lawsuits,” said Nick Gutierrez, a lawyer and president of the National Association of Landowners of Cuba, which lobbied heavily for the right to sue in US courts.

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