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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | At Issue | March 2006 

Mexico City Tells U.S. Hotel to Shut After Cuban Flap
email this pageprint this pageemail usKevin G. Hall - Knight Ridder


Mexico City officials post a note in front of the Sheraton Hotel in Mexico City, Mexico, Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2006. City officials on Tuesday posted "closed" notices on the U.S.-owned hotel in Mexico City that drew condemnation from the government after it kicked out a Cuban delegation under pressure from Washington. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
City officials ordered the closing of a major U.S.-owned hotel Tuesday in Mexico City, four weeks after it became the center of a diplomatic flap when U.S. Treasury Department officials ordered it to expel a delegation of Cuban officials.

Signs posted at the Maria Isabel Sheraton, which is across from the iconic Monument to Independence at one of the city's most prominent intersections, made no mention of the dispute, instead accusing the 755-room luxury hotel of violating unspecified city codes.

But the official who signed the closing notice, Virginia Jaramillo, the chief of the city's Cuauhtémoc district, had promised to move against the hotel after the 16-member Cuban delegation was asked to leave Feb. 2.

U.S. Treasury Department officials said the hotel would have been in violation of the U.S. trade embargo of Cuba had it allowed the Cubans to remain, but Mexican officials said the U.S. order infringed on Mexican sovereignty and violated Mexican law.

It was unknown whether city officials had consulted Mexico's federal government before ordering the closing.

"Due to the infringement of local law, the Sheraton's activities have been suspended," the notice said in eight languages. "We are sorry for the inconvenience that has been caused. Thank you for your understanding."

Large red signs reading "closed" in Spanish were on the hotel's doors.

But the Sheraton's marketing director, Dolores Castillo, said the hotel was still open despite the closing notice. "The hotel is operating at 100 percent," she said.

Hotel representatives were meeting with local officials in an attempt to avoid expelling guests, and people were being allowed to enter the hotel.

Guests who were leaving for the most part declined to talk to reporters. One woman who said she was a member of the hotel's health club said managers had told her to call today to find out if the hotel would be open.

Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, which owns the hotel, and U.S. Embassy officials had no comment.

The hotel is one of the city's best-known. Adjacent to the U.S. Embassy, it has long been a symbol of American presence in Mexico City.

That may have heightened Mexican resentment at the news that the Bush administration had pressured the hotel to expel the Cuban officials, who were attending a meeting with American oil-company executives about investment opportunities in Cuba's petroleum industry.

Mexican officials denounced the expulsion, and Foreign Minister Luis Ernesto Derbez complained to the State Department.

They did not advocate closing the hotel, however. Jaramillo, who is the top administrative official of the district that the hotel is in, first suggested that step in early February, when she said inspections prompted by the expulsion had found violations of city building codes.

The head of a Mexican travel and hotel association, Jorge Hernández, worried Tuesday that the flap could hurt tourism, one of the country's leading industries. When he was asked whether he thought the closing notice was in reprisal for the expulsion of the Cubans, he said, "The whole world interprets it that way."



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