CNN
August 19, 2002

Brand name U.S. food arrives in Cuba

HAVANA, Cuba (AP) --The first brand-name American food sold directly to
Cuba in more than four decades arrived on the island this weekend -- a 132-ton
shipment of butter, margarine and cereals.

The load, which arrived Sunday, is the first half of a $750,000 order Cuba placed
with Marsh Supermarkets Inc. of Indianapolis for its Marsh brand products. The
second half of the order is expected to arrive later this month.

With the shipment, Cuba now has purchased about 770,000 tons of American food
worth about $125 million since the communist government started taking advantage
of a U.S. law easing the 40-year-old American trade embargo to allow direct food
sales.

The new shipment was the first of packaged goods bearing a brand name --
Marsh's. Past deliveries have been of bulk commodities, including apples, onions,
corn, rice, wheat, soy, poultry, vegetable oil, eggs and pork lard.

Cuba could buy as much as 70 percent of all its imported food from the United
States if it could get financing for the deals, said Pedro Alvarez, the head of Cuba's
import food agency Alimport. Currently, it must pay cash for U.S. food.

Cuba annually imports about $1 billion in food, mostly from Europe, Asia and Latin
America, Alvarez said.

U.S. lawmakers from farm states are pushing to end a ban on American financing
of the sales to make it easier to sell to Cuba.

But President Bush has said he will veto any more efforts to ease existing sanctions
until Cuba undertakes economic and political reform.

  Copyright 2002 The Associated Press.