Cubans blame sponsor for Grammy no-shows
By Andrea Rodriguez, Associated Press Writer, 9/3/2003
HAVANA --
Cuban authorities blamed the Latin Grammys sponsor of bowing to pressure from Miami-based exiles and deliberately preventing Cuban musicians from attending the awards ceremonies on Wednesday night.
Deputy Culture Minister Abel Acosta said the Latin Recording Academy failed to send letters of invitation that the nominees needed to apply for U.S. visas.
Acosta, who held a news conference along with several of the nominated musicians Wednesday, said the letters never arrived even though officials early on reminded academy representatives of the complicated visa process.
Cuban citizens must undergo a lengthier and more extensive review given that the communist island appears on the United States' list of countries that sponsor terrorism. The process can take eight to 10 weeks.
"They've fixed everything to make money and to not have problems with the Miami mafia," Acosta said, repeating the derogatory nickname officials here often use to refer to anti-Castro Cuban exiles in the southern Florida city.
Latin Recording Academy President Gabriel Abaroa was not immediately available for comment, academy spokesman Harold Hamana said.
A U.S. official speaking on customary condition of anonymity said on Tuesday that the State Department had waived the letter requirement because the Latin Grammys are so well known.
Cuban officials went ahead and submitted the visa applications without the letters for three of the musicians who were in Cuba at the time and for four companions, Acosta said.
He said all three applications were denied -- for Juan Formell, leader of the popular group Los Van Van, which was nominated for Best Contemporary Tropical Album; Zenaida Romeu, a musician nominated for Best Flamenco Album; and Diosdado Ramos, leader of the Munequitos de Matanzas, which was nominated for Best Folk Album.
State Department officials confirmed Tuesday that three of seven visa applications had been denied, and that four applications were still pending, but did not release the names for confidentiality reasons.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Wednesday that none of the Cubans would be able to attend because the visa applications arrived too late to be processed.
"They're not going to make it," he said.
Although the Academy did not send the invitation letters to the musicians, it did send tickets necessary for admission to the event -- not only to the nominees but to now-dead musicians including the late Compay Segundo, Frank Emilio and Armando Romeu, an indignant Acosta told reporters.
"That is a lack of respect," he said.
A 112-member delegation from Cuba had planned to attend the awards, Acosta said. Now, none will attend. In solidarity with the excluded nominees, Cuban musicians who live outside of the country were to boycott the event Wednesday night in Miami, Acosta said.
The nominees in Cuba, meanwhile, said they would perform a concert in Havana on Thursday as an alternative. Musicians who did not receive U.S. visas on time last year did the same thing.
A coalition of dozens of Cuban exile groups had planned to protest outside the Grammys if Cuban musicians attended but said Tuesday night they would call off the demonstration if the visas weren't granted.
"If the agents of Castro aren't coming, we don't see a need to protest," said coalition spokesman Francisco Garcia. "We would be taking away from the Grammys show."
© Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Cubans wait for visas for Latin Grammys
By By LISA ADAMS, 9/3/2003
HAVANA --
On the eve of the Latin Grammy awards in Miami, nominated Cuban musicians still had not received U.S. visas Tuesday -- a headache that Cubans blamed on politics and American officials attributed to red tape.
Twelve Cuban acts -- including singer Ibrahim Ferrer of the Buena Vista Social Club, pianist Chucho Valdes and the popular group Los Van Van -- have been nominated for the awards, to be presented Wednesday night in a nationally televised ceremony.
Since Cuba is classified by the U.S. government as a state sponsor of terrorism, more extensive background checks are required for citizens of the communist island who apply for visas. The process can take from eight to 10 weeks.
Officials in Cuba's Culture Ministry said earlier this month that they began the process of seeking approvals for nominees on Aug. 2. No one could be reached for comment Tuesday at the Cuban Music Institute, which operates under the Culture Ministry. Officials from Cuba's foreign relations ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday.
The U.S. Interests Section received seven visa applications three weeks ago, on Aug. 12, a U.S. government official said Tuesday, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Three of the seven applications have been denied, and four others are still pending, the official said. The identities of those who were denied is confidential information. But a State Department official in Washington, who also spoke on customary condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press that no visa applications had even been received from Ferrer and Valdes.
A similar situation arose last year when none of 22 nominated musicians received U.S. visas in time to attend the ceremony.
Fueling the suspicions of Grammy nominees and their supporters in Cuba are the yearly protests of Cuban exiles in Miami who oppose the communist government of President Fidel Castro and the Grammy nominations of Cuban musicians.
The reason the Cuban musicians probably won't appear at the Grammys "is very simple: They were deliberately excluded," said an article on the Web site of the Communist Party newspaper Granma. The paper charged that anti-Cuban activists conspired to prevent them from coming.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Tuesday the primary reason four Cuban nominees still haven't heard if they can travel to Miami is that they applied late.
"Everybody knows ... that it can take six to eight weeks to process applications," he said.
While some held out last-minute hopes the visas would come through, others seemed resigned to celebrating the awards ceremonies from afar.
"It's a shame that they're depriving Miami of something I'm sure the community wanted to see and hear," Cuban performer Eliades Ochoa, nominated for a Grammy for the Best Traditional Tropical Album, said on Cuba's state-run television news Tuesday night. "But if we don't have visas, well then we just can't go."
© Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Cubans blame sponsor for Grammy no-shows
By Andrea Rodriguez, Associated Press Writer, 9/3/2003
HAVANA --
Cuban authorities blamed the Latin Grammys sponsor of bowing to pressure from Miami-based exiles and deliberately preventing Cuban musicians from attending the awards ceremonies on Wednesday night.
Deputy Culture Minister Abel Acosta said the Latin Recording Academy failed to send letters of invitation that the nominees needed to apply for U.S. visas.
Acosta, who held a news conference along with several of the nominated musicians Wednesday, said the letters never arrived even though officials early on reminded academy representatives of the complicated visa process.
Cuban citizens must undergo a lengthier and more extensive review given that the communist island appears on the United States' list of countries that sponsor terrorism. The process can take eight to 10 weeks.
"They've fixed everything to make money and to not have problems with the Miami mafia," Acosta said, repeating the derogatory nickname officials here often use to refer to anti-Castro Cuban exiles in the southern Florida city.
Latin Recording Academy President Gabriel Abaroa was not immediately available for comment, academy spokesman Harold Hamana said.
A U.S. official speaking on customary condition of anonymity said on Tuesday that the State Department had waived the letter requirement because the Latin Grammys are so well known.
Cuban officials went ahead and submitted the visa applications without the letters for three of the musicians who were in Cuba at the time and for four companions, Acosta said.
He said all three applications were denied -- for Juan Formell, leader of the popular group Los Van Van, which was nominated for Best Contemporary Tropical Album; Zenaida Romeu, a musician nominated for Best Flamenco Album; and Diosdado Ramos, leader of the Munequitos de Matanzas, which was nominated for Best Folk Album.
State Department officials confirmed Tuesday that three of seven visa applications had been denied, and that four applications were still pending, but did not release the names for confidentiality reasons.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Wednesday that none of the Cubans would be able to attend because the visa applications arrived too late to be processed.
"They're not going to make it," he said.
Although the Academy did not send the invitation letters to the musicians, it did send tickets necessary for admission to the event -- not only to the nominees but to now-dead musicians including the late Compay Segundo, Frank Emilio and Armando Romeu, an indignant Acosta told reporters.
"That is a lack of respect," he said.
A 112-member delegation from Cuba had planned to attend the awards, Acosta said. Now, none will attend. In solidarity with the excluded nominees, Cuban musicians who live outside of the country were to boycott the event Wednesday night in Miami, Acosta said.
The nominees in Cuba, meanwhile, said they would perform a concert in Havana on Thursday as an alternative. Musicians who did not receive U.S. visas on time last year did the same thing.
A coalition of dozens of Cuban exile groups had planned to protest outside the Grammys if Cuban musicians attended but said Tuesday night they would call off the demonstration if the visas weren't granted.
"If the agents of Castro aren't coming, we don't see a need to protest," said coalition spokesman Francisco Garcia. "We would be taking away from the Grammys show."
© Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.