ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:96030501.POL DATE:03/05/96 TITLE:05-03-96 SENATE VOTES TO APPROVE CUBA SANCTIONS BILL TEXT: (House to vote March 6; Clinton supports measure) (460) By Wendy S. Ross USIA Congressional Correspondent Washington -- The Senate March 5 by a vote of 74 to 22 approved legislation to strengthen economic sanctions against the Castro government following Cuba's shooting down last month of two small unarmed U.S. planes. The vote on the conference committee report came after two and a half hours of debate. The House plans to vote on the conference report March 6. President Clinton supports the legislation. The legislation, known as the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (Libertad) Act, is designed to pressure the Castro government by drying up foreign investment. It allows Cuban-Americans to file lawsuits in U.S. courts against foreign companies doing business in Cuba on expropriated land they formerly owned. Under a compromise worked out with the Clinton administration, the president may suspend this controversial provision for periods of six months. The bill also would ban foreign "traffickers" in expropriated property from entering the United States. The measure also instructs U.S. executive directors of international financial institutions to oppose loans or financing to Cuba and Cuban membership until the U.S. president determines that a democratically elected government is in power in Cuba. The measure also would cut foreign aid to Russia and other former Soviet states if they help Cuba, unless the president certifies that this aid is important to U.S. national security and that the Russians are not sharing intelligence with the Cubans. The legislation also instructs the director of the U.S. Information Agency to implement the conversion of Television Marti to Ultra-High Frequency (UHF) broadcasting, as previously funded by Congress. The legislation also condemns the Castro government's attack of February 24 on the two Brothers to the Rescue aircraft. Similar legislation was blocked last year in Congress when a number of senators considered it too extreme. But following the shootdown, with the death of the four people in the two planes, a wave of outrage against Cuba in the Cuban-American community brought a quick turnaround in Congress. Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, a co-sponsor of the bill, jetted back from the campaign trail to voice his support for the bill, as well as to get in a few political digs at President Clinton. Dole, the leading candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, said the Cuba bill would show Fidel Castro that "his days are numbered" and it would "cut off Castro's foreign economic lifeline." Reading a letter from President Clinton expressing support for the bill, Dole said the bill now had bipartisan support, but he couldn't resist admonishing Clinton: "I think the administration has finally gotten the message after cozying up to Castro....They have now seen the error of their ways." NNNN