dpa
Miami
The Cuban government will lift restrictions so travelers will be able to take unlimited food, medicines and hygiene products without paying customs duties, a measure taken after Cubans took to the street Sunday to ask for food, medicines, and "the end of the dictatorship.”
Cuban Prime Minister Manuel Marrero announced the measures, which will start Monday, on the TV show Mesa Redonda - Round Table - on Wednesday evening.
Despite widespread scarcities, the government had restricted the import of all goods to squeeze the "mula” business - mules, the name given to people who take goods to sell on the island, where all stores are state-owned.
Many Cuban Americans also used "mulas” to send money and other basic necessities to their families.
The prime minister said he expects the measure to have a more significant impact when air travel becomes normal again. The government has limited the number of flights to the island due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The Cuban government has been pressed to respond to islandwide protests fueled by a severe economic crisis and widespread scarcities of food, medicines and basic goods, and a record daily number of COVID cases that surpassed 6,000 on Wednesday.
The show took a different tone than earlier, more combative, appearances of Cuban leader Miguel D?az-Canel, who first reacted to the protests by calling on fellow communists to confront the demonstrators by any means.
He and other Cuban officials have called the demonstrators "mercenaries” and have accused the US government of masterminding and financing the uprising.
The foreign minister, Bruno Rodriguez, even issued a veiled threat against the United States, saying it was risking a new exodus of Cuban migrants.
After widespread criticism of the violent police response against the demonstrators, including from several island-based artists like the legendary band Los Van Van, and the international community, D?az-Canel tried to strike a more conciliatory tone.