Cuba and the United
States have re-established direct telephone links for the first time in
15 years(cut-off in 1999) Cuba's state telecommunications company announced on Wednesday March 11,2015
The company said it reestablished direct interconnection between the two
countries, initially for international calls, as a result of an
agreement between the firm and US service provider Domestic Telecom,
Inc. (IDT)
The contract between Etecsa and Newark, New Jersey-based IDT was first
reported on Feb. 20,2015 The contract marks the first accord signed by
companies from both nations since Washington and Havana announced in
December 2014 they planned to restore diplomatic ties
Telephone calls have until now passed through a third country, making them very expensive
It is the first agreement signed between both countries since the announcement in December 2014 that the two states would renew diplomatic ties
Americans and Cubans will now be able to make direct calls to each other's countries.
Note
For decades before the Cuban Revolution, the two countries were connected by undersea cables for telegraph and telephone services. In 1959, Fidel Castro confiscated the Cuban Telephone Company from International Telephone and Telegraph (ITT), a US-based conglomerate that owned a majority stake in the company
After the US imposed an embargo on its island neighbor in the 1960s, the American government permitted AT&T to use its undersea cable, but did not allow it to add capacity. The cable became unusable in the 1980s, forcing long-distance phone calls between the United States and Cuba to be routed through third parties via satellite uplinks. At that point, AT&T could not pay Cuba for long-distance calls, and deposited the money into escrow accounts.The controversy over the release of these funds became another contentious chapter in US-Cuba relations
With the passage of the Cuban Democracy Act in the 1990s, the FCC authorized US carriers to provide direct-dial service to Cuba via satellite
At least one American company presented a plan to install and operate a new undersea cable stretching the 90 miles between the two countries
But a 1996 law in Cuba prevented the connection from being laid, and the US never approved the company’s plans for the cable
Direct-dial service was shut down in 2000 after a monetary dispute between the two countries. The Cuban government eventually approved a plan that connected the island to Venezuela and Jamaica, as opposed to choosing a 2009 plan that would have linked it with the US
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