A Bacardi executive has testified at a US Congress
subcommittee hearing as the group continues to fight what is calls a
“sudden and unexplained” trademark ruling over Havana Club rum.
Lawmakers are scrutinizing the decision to
allow Pernod Ricard and the Cuban government to renew their Havana Club
trademark in the US. In January this
year, the US Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and the US Patent &
Trademark Office (PTO) granted French drinks group Pernod Ricard permission to renew it's Havana Club
trademark in the US, where Bacardi has its own trademark for Havana Club
rum. Due to a trade embargo between US
and Cuba, which has been in place since 1961 when the Cuban revolution led to
communism, Pernod Ricard has been unable to launch Cuba-made Havana Club in the
US.
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The US
House of Representatives Judiciary Committee has launched an investigation into
the matter and recently called Rick Wilson, senior vice president for external
affairs at Bacardi, to take the witness stand during its hearing. “These decisions are unprecedented and
shocking because they undo decades of United States law and policy by approving
Cuba’s efforts to capitalize on, and traffic, in stolen goods,” Wilson said in
his opening testimony. “Courts in the
United States have steadfastly held that foreign confiscations will not be
given effect because such confiscations are ‘shocking to our sense of
justice’.”
‘Confiscation at gunpoint’
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“For
decades, the United States has prevented Cuba and its business partners from
profiting off the United States Havana Club registration – it should continue
to do so.” House
Judiciary Committee chairman Bob Goodlatt said: “This week the IP subcommittee
will examine the issue of confiscated property in Cuba.
“The
Cuban government, led by Fidel Castro, has stolen billions in property,
including homes and businesses, owned by Americans and American
investors. Perhaps the most recognised case is that of the Arechabala
Family liquor business, which had its trademark for Havana Club Rum seized by
the Cuban government and then licensed to another company against the family’s
wishes.
“As
the Obama Administration looks to improve relations with Cuba, important
questions remain about how these claims will be satisfied.”
Read More at https://www.thespiritsbusiness.com/2016/02/us-congress-scrutinises-havana-club-ruling/
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