Category Archive for "Cuban Cigar News"



Cuban Cigar News info on 02 Jan 2009

Will Obama keep his campaign promise on Cuba?

As the world ushers in the new year, Cuba will celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power and sparked an intense political conflict with the United States that has far outlived the Cold War.

President-elect Barack Obama had not yet been born when Castro drove the military dictator Gen. Fulgencio Batista from the island on January 1, 1959. Now, half a century and ten U.S. presidents later, Obama appears likely to lead the first major liberalization of America’s draconian Cuba policy in decades.

In his U.S. Senate and presidential campaigns, Obama pledged to reverse some of the harsh sanctions on Cuba, imposed over the past fifty years and intensified under President Bush, that have cut off nearly all interaction between the two countries. But while he is likely to open the channels of communication and travel, particularly for Cuban-Americans, it is doubtful that he will make significant reforms to the trade restrictions under the longstanding embargo.

A number of factors free Obama’s hand to make the sorts of changes that have eluded his predecessors. The end of the 49-year reign of Fidel Castro, who in February officially ceded power to his brother Raúl, inspired hope that Cuba would begin to democratize, and very modest reforms have indeed been initiated. But the most significant precondition for improved U.S.-Cuban relations, Latin American policy experts say, has taken place not in Cuba, but here in the United States, with the November presidential election. Where past presidents have been beholden to Cuban-American voters in Florida, Obama proved he could win an election without the previously critical voting bloc.

“U.S. Cuba policy has not been a foreign policy,” explained Shannon O’Neil, the Douglas Dillon Fellow for Latin America Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. “It’s been a domestic policy, based on the Cuban vote in Florida.” In 2000 and 2004, George W. Bush relied on the Cuban vote to carry Florida by narrow margins. Without the Sunshine State, he would not have won either election.

In 2008, however, the equation changed, as Obama won while carrying just 35 percent of the Cuban-American vote in Florida. “The Cubans voted overwhelmingly against Obama,” said Daniel Erikson, director of Caribbean programs at the Inter-American Dialogue and author of The Cuba Wars. “So what the November election shows is that he did not need the Cuban vote to win Florida, and he did not need the Florida vote to win the presidential election.”

Released from the pressures of the Cuban-American constituency, which has generally taken a hard line against Castro’s Cuba and opposed efforts to ease sanctions on the island nation, Obama has some latitude to pursue reform of the country’s Cuba policy. However, it is unclear how this opportunity will translate into reform.

Campaigning in Illinois for the U.S. Senate in 2004, Obama said in a speech that he wanted “to end the embargo with Cuba” that had “utterly failed in the effort to overthrow Castro.” In the same campaign, he pushed for the “normalization of relations with Cuba” to “help the oppressed and poverty-stricken Cuban people while setting the stage for a more democratic government once Castro inevitably leaves the scene.” (Instead of an embassy that would allow for full diplomacy, each of the two countries has an “interests section” in the other’s capital with little more than nominal authority.)

But his message during his presidential campaign was substantially different. In August 2007, he told a Miami audience that he would not “take off the embargo,” but would preserve it as “an important inducement for change.” However, he did promise to “grant Cuban Americans unrestricted rights to visit family and send remittances to the island.”

Currently, under the stringent limits imposed by President Bush in 2004, Cuban-Americans can visit Cuba just once every three years, and they are limited to sending no more than $300 annually to their families there.

Obama’s apparent plan to lift these restrictions would have broad support. According to a poll released on Dec. 3 by Florida International University, 66 percent of Cuban-Americans in Miami-Dade County — usually among the most vocal opponents of reduced sanctions — want to end the travel limits, and 65 percent hope to see the restriction on remittances lifted.

Still, there will be some resistance if Obama eases the limits on travel and remittances. “There’s a small but influential group of anti-Castro hard-liners in both Cuba and Miami who will fight tooth and nail to prevent these kinds of changes,” said Erikson.

Ray Walser, the Senior Policy Analyst for Latin America at the conservative Heritage Foundation, expressed concern over Obama’s plans. “You’re giving something away to a totalitarian regime without asking for anything in return,” he said. However, he acknowledged that he was probably on the losing end of this battle. “The likelihood is that there will be unilateral concessions from the Obama administration.”

In fact, the changes to the travel restrictions could extend beyond Cuban-Americans. “There is pretty broad support for lifting the travel ban for all Americans,” said Erikson. O’Neil agreed that we might “see the travel restrictions eased, if not lifted, for non-Cubans.”

What is unlikely to change in the near future is the embargo. Instituted by President Kennedy as a security measure — but not before he had an aide buy him 1,200 of his favorite Cuban cigars — the embargo was codified and expanded by the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 and the Helms-Burton Act of 1996. These laws prevent the president from lifting the embargo without congressional approval or from normalizing relations with Cuba while a Castro is still in power.

“Before the passage of Helms-Burton, it was largely a question of presidential discretion,” said Larry Birns, director of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs, a liberal think tank. “But Clinton made that concession to the Cuban hardliners.”

Every major presidential candidate since 1992 has supported the trade sanctions against Cuba, according to Erikson. And Obama is no exception. Like other leading politicians, he has described the embargo in terms of leverage, arguing that it should not be lifted until Cuba makes significant democratic reforms.

Walser endorses this notion of reciprocity. “The essence is some willingness on the part of the Cuban regime to change some of its fundamentals,” he said. But because the chances for change are remote, he said that lifting the embargo while Raúl Castro is still in power is going to be difficult.

The idea that the embargo creates leverage has drawn criticism from a number of camps, encompassing both liberals and free trade advocates. “Many people, including Obama, have described the embargo as leverage, but I think that’s a conceptually confused notion,” said Erikson. “What the embargo represents is an absence of leverage.” A free exchange of goods and ideas, embargo critics argue, would much more effectively enable compromise and reform.

While the embargo’s repeal does not appear imminent, O’Neil says it could receive a boost from the agricultural lobby. Farmers would like to gain a new market in Cuba, where they could sell their produce more widely if sanctions were removed.

“Obama doesn’t owe anything to Cuban-Americans,” she said, since they did not contribute to his electoral victory. “On the other hand, Obama does owe quite a lot to the folks in Iowa for his win.” Obama’s upset victory over Democratic rival Hillary Clinton in the Iowa caucus proved that he could win in rural, majority-white areas and laid the foundation for his eventual nomination.

Kal Wagenheim, editor and publisher of the business website Caribbean Update, agrees that the prospect of new buyers in Cuba is enticing to American growers and manufacturers. “The American business community is dying to get in there,” he said. “There is a strong consensus in the business community — and they’re certainly not communist — to normalize relations with Cuba.”

The embargo has also lost considerable support among the general populace, particularly Cuban-Americans. This year, for the first time, a majority (55 percent) of Miami-Dade Cuban-Americans favor lifting the embargo, according to the Florida International University poll. Just a year ago, that number was 42 percent.

The power to make that change, however, lies with Congress, and a strong and growing contingent of Cuban-American senators and House members continues to oppose any easing of sanctions. Cuban-American lobbying groups in Miami such as the U.S.-Cuba Democracy PAC have raised substantial funds for candidates who share their hard line on Cuba. The result is a Democratic Party that remains split on Cuba, even as a small number of Republicans, including Obama’s new transportation secretary Ray LaHood, have pushed for reform.

So how will the next 50 years of the United States’ relationship with its neighbor across the Florida Straits differ from the half century that is now drawing to a close? According to Erikson, it’s too early to tell.

“The last 50 years of U.S.-Cuban relations have not only been negative for the two countries, but they’ve almost been uniquely bad for bilateral relations between any two counties anywhere in the world,” he said. “So it seems like the future should be much better than the present. But if history has taught us anything about U.S.-Cuban relations, as much as people would like them to get better, they can always get worse.”

Between the economic crisis and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Cuba may not be Obama’s most pressing priority. But as the island crosses this historical milestone, he has an opportunity to apply his mantra of change to an area where it has long been lacking.

Source: The Washington Independent

    Cuban Cigar News info on 27 Dec 2008

    When will Cuban Cigars be legal?

    On a recent call with Rush Limbaugh, one caller asked when the Cuban cigar would be sold legally in the US. Here is Mr. Limbaugh’s answer from the transcript of the call:

    It is going to be a long time before you will be able to get Cuban cigars legally in the United States. Even if the embargo — let’s say Barack Obama comes in and lifts the embargo, even if he does, even if he lifts the embargo, it’s going to happen in stages. The first thing he’ll lift is travel restrictions, but I don’t think he’s gonna go very quickly on opening up full-fledged trade with Cuba. But even if he did, let’s say even if he did, you have no clue what is ahead of us as cigar smokers. What will happen is that the domestic manufacturers, defined by those who are in the Dominican and in Honduras, Nicaragua, Cameroon, all of the places where elements of cigars are grown, and all the places where they’re assembled, these people have in many cases marketed the brands of the Cuban cigars you’re talking about, Hoyo de Monterrey, Punch, Romeo Y Julieta, Simon Bolivar, all of these great Cuban brands have been marketed by other owners in the United States, and they are going to go to the Commerce Department, and they’re going to say we have made these brands popular, we have invested in the product and in the brand in this country, and they’re gonna ask the Commerce Department to ban the import of competing brand-name cigars from Cuba.

    The second thing that will happen is that the domestic producers I’m talking about from the people in Dominican to Nicaragua, Honduras, they are going to say we want raw Cuban tobacco to be able to blend it with our cigars. They’re gonna do everything they can to keep the Cuban cigars you want out of this country legally in a host of ways. Then we haven’t even discussed the Cuban exile community in Florida and other places they live. They are going to be all over the State Department saying, “We want our property back that Castro took from us.” They want their property back and they want their factories back, and they want their companies back, and some of them are cigars, some of them are rum. If the embargo ends tomorrow, you aren’t going to see a legitimate Cuban cigar for years in this country.

    It is insurmountable, unless somebody waves a magic wand. But just stop and think of it from the competitive standpoint of all these people that have their own Hoyo, who have their own Punch cigars, who have their own Romeo, who have their own Montecristos — well, Montecristo is a different circumstance because the company that owns the Cuban Montecristo is in Spain, and they also use the brand here, so you might be able to get some of theirs in, you might be able to get a Montecristo from Cuba, but you can’t have these Cuban cigars come in. Who’s going to make the Cubans change their brands? Their brand names are older than ours. So it’s going to be a black market for quite a while. Besides, Obama smokes cigarettes.

      Cuban Cigar News info on 26 Dec 2008

      Festival del Habano’s 2009

      Habanos S.A. Corporation is hosting the 11th International Habanos Festival, the most important event in the Habanos realm, between the dates of February 23rd and Feb 27th 2009 in Havana, Cuba.

      From 23rd to 27th of February La Habana, venue of the Festival will become the meeting place of the distributors, specialists and lovers of the best cigar in the world. It will be a unique setting for presenting the novelties to be incorporated to the Habanos portfolio in 2009, which guarantee the dynamism of the Cuban cigar market.

      Within the Habanos Festival, the Trade Fair and the International Seminar will provide a wide exchange of knowledge, experiences, products and ideas and create a unique atmosphere to fully enjoy the aroma, flavor and texture of the Habanos, the true stars of the Festival.

      Cuban Lou’s Cigar Co. is looking forward to seeing you in Havana where you will find pleasure in the tradition and future of the Habanos.

      GENERAL PROGRAM

      Sunday 02/22

      10:00- 16:00 hrs Registration at Havana International Conference Centre.

      Monday 02/23

      10:00- 16:00 hrs.  Registration at Havana International Conference Centre.
      10:00- 17:00 hrs.  Preliminary of the Habanosommelier Contest at International Conference Centre (Room 5).
      14:00 hrs.        Opening of Trade Fair.
      15:30 hrs.         Combinations with Habanos at International Conference Centre. (Room 6).
      19:00 hrs.         Welcome Night: New Products Launching (2009).

      Tuesday 02/24

      07:00- 16:00 hrs.  Visit to tobacco plantations at Vuelta Abajo Region. (Pinar del Río).
      Free Night.

      Wednesday 02/25

      10:00- 10:30 hrs.  Opening of the International Seminar. Main commercial results of Habanos S.A. in 2008, by Manuel García Morejón, Commercial Vice President of Habanos S.A. (Room 4).
      10:30- 11:00 hrs.  Launching of new products, 2009. (Room 4).
      11:00- 11:30 hrs.  Coffee Break.
      11:30- 12:30 hrs.  Tasting with Coffee, Rum and Habano. (Room 3).
      12:30- 14:30 hrs.  Lunch at Bucan Restaurant.
      14:30- 16:00 hrs.  Master class: Rolling a Habano totally by hand. (Room 4).
      16:00- 17:00 hrs.  Tasting: Habanos with wines from Bodegas Torres. (Room 3).
      20:00 hrs.         Night devoted to Trinidad Brand.  Its 40th anniversary and 10 years of the commercial launching. Habana Libre Tryp Hotel. Embajadores Room.

      Thursday 02/26

      09:00- 12:00 hrs.   Visit to Habanos Factories: H-Upmann & Laguito Cigar factories.
      12:30- 14:00 hrs.   Lunch at Bucan Restaurant.
      14:00- 15:30 hrs.   Combinations with Habanos. Final (Room 3).
      15:30- 16:00 hrs.   Lecture: “The Habano in publications by Cesar Adames. (Room 4).
      16:00- 16:30 hrs.   Lecture: “The Restoration in Cuba by Fernando Fernández. (Room 4).
      16:30- 17:30 hrs.   Documental Projections: ¨With the chaveta´s Touch by Pamela Sporn¨, and ¨Habanos, Women and Cohiba by Niurka Pérez¨. (Room 3).
      Free Night.

      Friday 02/27

      10:00- 11:30 hrs.  Habanosommelier Final Contest (Room3).
      11:30- 12:00 hrs.  Lecture: “Habano Fermentation” by Luis Sorinas. (Room 4).
      12:00- 13:00 hrs.  Closing Session. (Room 4). Awards: Best Stand (by category),  Habanosommelier contest winner.
      13:00- hrs.         Final lunch at Bucán Restaurant.
      20:00- hrs.         Gala Night: Launching of new product from Cohiba Brand. PABEXPO. (Room C).

      Prices per Activities

      ACTIVITIES PRICES IN CUC

      Welcome Night  210.00 CUC
      Visit to Plantations  80.00  CUC
      International Seminar 315.00  CUC
      Visit to Habanos Factories “H. Upmann” and “Laguito 15.00  CUC
      Night of 40th anniversary of Trinidad Brand. 185.00   CUC
      Gala Night 525.00   CUC

      Full PROGRAM (Full Package) 1,330.00 CUC
      ACCOMPANYING PROGRAM 1,230.00 CUC

      The full package will have a 10% of discount

      Important: DEADLINE for the Festival Social Activities

      In order to get a better organization of the festival social activities we will be to receive their requests until January 20th, 2009. After that date, no request will be accepted.

      Payment by bank transfer will be accepted until February 13, 2009.

      The requests for the Welcome Night will be in force until Monday February 23rd, 2009, 12.00 m . After this time, we’ll proceed with “last minute” sale, of those requests not previously paid.

      The request for the Trinidad Night will be in force until Wednesday February 25th, 2009, 12.00m. After this time, we’ll proceed with “last minute” sale, of those requests not previously paid.

      The request for the Gala Night will be in force until Thursday February 26th, 2009, 12.00 m . After this time, we’ll proceed with “last minute” sale, of those requests not previously paid.

      Contact (for reservation of program and activities):

      Mrs. Alina Leal
      Habanos S.A.
      Marketing Division
      Tel. (53) (7) 204-0513 y 204-0514/ ext 550 Fax: (53) (7) 204 0549
      Email: aleal@habanos.cu

      Payment policy:

      According to the provision for currency exchange issued by Banco Nacional de Cuba, in force in the Republic of Cuba, the payment policy for the 11th Habanos Festival will be as follow:

      1- Cash Payments: They will only be accepted in CUC (Convertible Cuban pesos)
      2- Bank transfers: They will only be accepted in EUROS, at the exchange rate in force on the LAST DAY of the month before that in which the bank transfer is issued, taking as a reference the European Central Bank. In all cases, this value will be given by Habanos S.A. (Deadline for bank transfer February 13rd, 2009).
      3- Debits (Discounts) due to bank transfers will be borne in each case by the Party proceeding payment thereof. Habanos S.A will not assume discounts by bank transfers of the issuing bank and must receive the complete payment (without bank discounts) of the activity that has been bought or of the full package, as the case may be.
      4- Participants from United States of America will have two choices for cash payments; as follows:
      a)    On their arrival in Cuba, the USD dollars must be exchanged to CUC (convertible Cuban pesos).
      b)    They could acquire Euros, Canadian Dollar, Sterling Pounds, Mexican Peso, Swiss Francs, Japanese ¥, in their countries and exchange them for CUC on their arrival in Cuba.
      5-Payments through Credit Cards: Payments through credit cards backed by American banks or their branches will not be accepted. Credit cards will only be accepted: VISA, Master Card, CABAL, TRAVEL CARD, DELIVERY CARD, BF, RED AND SERCUBA. (The exchange rate applied should be 1.1124 vs. CUC).
      6- Credit Cards supported by North American Banks will not be accepted.

      PAYMENT IN EURO (BY TRANSFER BANK)

      BENEFICIARY:          HABANOS S.A.
      BANK OF BENEFICIARY:  BANCO INTERNACIONAL DE COMERCIO S.A. AYESTARAN Y 20 DE MAYO. CIUDAD DE LA HABANA, CUBA.
      SWIFT NUMBER:         BIDCCUHH.
      ACCOUNT NO.           EURO 32101021500 EURO
      CORRESPONDANT BANK:   DRESDNER BANK AG FRANKFURT
      ACCOUNT NUMBER:       499/080 89930/00/888.

        Cuban Cigar News Kevin on 05 Mar 2008

        2008 Habanos Releases

        Here are the proposed releases for 2008. I have only seen the Magnum 50 and Hoyo Epicure Especial while at the Habanos Festival in February, but the following is suppose to be released during 2008…

        Continue Reading »

          Cuban Cigar News Kevin on 05 Mar 2008

          2008 New Release – H.Upmann Magnum 50

          One of the most anticipated releases this year was the launch of the H.Upmann Magnum 50. Some of you may remember the highly sought after Upmann Mag 50 Limitada from 2005. Habanos SA has re-released the Magnum 50 in all of its glory. This years presentation will be in CABs of 50, 25, 10 as well as in the 3AT (packs of 3 Tubos) format. These will be a regular production release. I did have a chance to try one at the Festival and I can say that in my opinion they are just as good as the 05′s. Anyways, here are some pictures taken at Habanos. I apologize as my camera is not the greatest, but I think you can get the idea.

          H.Upmann Magnum 50 H.Upmann Magnum 50 H.Upmann Magnum 50 H.Upmann Magnum 50
          H.Upmann Magnum 50      

          Next: First look at the new Hoyo Epicure Especial for 2008

            Cuban Cigar News Kevin on 05 Mar 2008

            Report: Festival del Habano X – 2008

            Just thought I would write a very quick summary of my week at the 10th Annual Festival del Habano in Havana, Cuba from February 25th-29th 2008. As I could not attend last year due to some last minute circumstances, I was excited about going down this year, though it was a very last minute decision. I was not only looking forward to smoking some of the new releases, but getting out of the -20C temperatures was an added benefit. Myself and Jerry were going down and we were meeting a couple of friends there as well. I have to say the trip did not start off on the best note. We booked with Sunwing Vacations (be careful). Our flight was “suppose” to leave at 3:30pm…let’s just say we were the last flight out of Pearson Airport at 12:47am. I wasn’t too pleased with the 9 hour delay needless to say. Three and a half hours later we arrived in Varadero, Cuba…only a 2 hour bus ride to Havana remains. Oh, and by the way, the 9hr delay = $75 travel voucher.

            Continue Reading »

              Cuban Cigar News Kevin on 04 Mar 2008

              The First Blog…

              Ok..before I start, I just want to say that this Blog is a work in progress. We will continually update the software to make this the best and most current from a feature perspective…ok…here we go…

              Well, this is something new for us and myself, our very own Blog. This is definitely going to be interesting :) Over the last few years Blogs have become and powerful tool in presenting opinions, information, and insight while creating discussion amongst its readers. I have read many over the years and found them to be interesting for the most part. I am not sure why I didn’t do this sooner, but I guess I am one of those “first time callers, long time listeners”, if you know what I mean.

              Continue Reading »