Germany and Cuba have signed
framework accords to formalize future ties. Frank-Walter Steinmeier's visit to
Havanna is the first by a German foreign minister since Germany's reunification
25 years ago.
Thursday's signing by Steinmeier and his Cuban
counterpart, Bruno Rodriguez (pictured above), involved two documents intended
to open regular consultations between their ministries and cultural exchanges.
They also contained an acknowledgment of human rights,
an issue raised by Amnesty International which is critical of Cuban clamps of
freedoms of expression.
Steinmeier's trip comes just days ahead of the
intended reopening by Cuba and the US of their embassies. President Barak Obama
announced two weeks ago the restoration of ties after half a century of former
Cold War enmities.
'Change process'
Steinmeier said Thursday that the time
had come for Germany to "readjust" relations and end a long period of
"speechlessness and estrangement."
"We find ourselves positioned in
the middle of a change process, from which no one can say at which speed it
will develop," Steinmeier added.
During the Cold War, the Caribbean nation only had
contacts with the former communist East Germany. Foreign ministers were never
sent to Cuba by the then West Germany.
The only previous visit by a
post-unification German minister was in 2001 by Werner Müller, Germany's then
economy minister.
Talks with Archbishop Ortega
Steinmeier began his two-day trip in the
Cuban capital on Thursday by visiting Catholic Archbishop Jaime Ortega, who
played a key role in persuading the Cuban government to release political
prisoners in 2011.
An encounter between Cuba's ailing
former revolutionary leader Fidel Castro is not planned, nor are talks with his
brother, Raul Castro, who is the island nation's current leader.
Limited trade, keen tourists
Steinmeier is accompanied by a small
delegation of business representatives.
Bilateral trade between Cuba and Germany
is still relatively low at around 386 million euros ($424 million) annually. On
Germany's list of export destinations, Cuba ranks at the 101st spot. For
imports to Germany, it is ranked 125th.
Tourism is a major factor. Last year, 124,000 Germans
visited Cuba, making them the third largest inbound group after tourists from
Canada and Britain.
The German news agency DPA said Germany
hoped to be able to open a branch of its cultural entity, the Goethe Institute,
in Havanna.
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