Thursday, August 25, 2016

IRS goes after Pastors for Peace for sending aid to Cuba

IRS goes after Pastors for Peace for sending aid to Cuba
BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES
ngameztorres@elnuevoherald.com

For years, the U.S.-based Pastors for Peace defied the embargo on Cuba
with "caravans" of humanitarian aid hauled across the U.S.-Mexico border
that were then shipped to the island.

In Havana, its founder, the Rev. Lucius Walker, was received like a hero.

Although the organization never applied for a license from the Office of
Foreign Assets Control to bring aid to Cuba, it did not face reprisals,
although U.S. authorities occasionally tried to withhold the shipments
on the Mexican border.

But Pastors for Peace now faces punishment for its charitable acts from
another U.S. agency: the Internal Revenue Service. The organization was
recently informed that will it lose its tax-exempt status for failing to
declare the shipments to Cuba.

The Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization Pastors for
Peace (IFCO), which has been audited by the IRS for the last seven
years, said in a statement that the action is politically motivated.

"The IRS claimed that our work to bring humanitarian aid and build
friendship with the Cuban people was done in violation of the Treasury
Department's 'Trading with the Enemy Act'," the organization said.

"We challenge the ability of the IRS to make this claim...OFAC, fully
aware of our annual caravans not accepting government licenses, has
never prosecuted us. How is it that IRS now has the right to strip us of
our tax-exempt status?"

Asked about the IRS audit, the organization acknowledged that they
"never declared [the aid to the IRS] because we had not requested a
license," said Manolo Enrique de los Santos, IFCO's Cuba aid program
coordinator.

An IRS spokeswoman declined to comment on the case citing federal
privacy and confidentiality laws.

Since 1992, the caravans have carried more than 4,000 tons of
humanitarian aid to Cuba in the form of school supplies, medicines and
300 buses. In 2009, when the audit began, the organization had donated
eight school buses and two trucks to "churches, schools, hospitals and
NGOs, as well as more than 100 tons of medical supplies to centers
around the country," the organization stated.

De los Santos said IFCO would likely have received the special licenses
required by the U.S. Department of the Treasury if they had applied for
them, but that "probably may have limited what we could take and who I
could deliver to, and we would have not allowed the U.S. government to
limit our Christian mission to help the people of Cuba ... OFAC has
consistently limited how to deliver aid and to whom."

For example, he said that "it is easier to deliver aid to a private
cooperative than to a school."

The organization also raised questions about the IRS action at a time of
change in U.S. policy toward the island.

Over the past year, OFAC has expanded the list of humanitarian
activities that can be performed with a general license (without
requesting special authorization), including medical donations and those
intended to cover "basic human needs."

During a press conference in Havana, Gail Walker, the daughter of Rev.
Walker and current executive director of the organization, stressed her
father's respect for Fidel Castro, "with whom he had a friendship that
lasted forever."

In an interview with EFE, the activist referred to the embargo as a
"blockade" and also as an "anti-Christian and antihumanitarian policy."

De los Santos said that the organization will launch a legal battle
against the IRS and will continue sending aid to Cuba "without asking
for permission" from the U.S. government.

"The intention of this measure is to paralyze us," he said. "We will
continue the work in other ways."

Source: Pastors for Peace to lose tax-exempt status | In Cuba Today -
http://www.incubatoday.com/news/article97616747.html

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