President Barack Obama has called his trip to Cuba a "historic
opportunity" in his first comments after becoming the first serving US
leader to visit the state in almost nine decades. The
three-day visit marks the culmination of thaw in relations between
Washington and the communist island that began in December 2014.

Obama arrived in Havana on Sunday evening with his wife and daughters
and is due to meet Cuban President Raul Castro later on Monday.
"It's been nearly 90 years since a US president stepped foot in Cuba,
it is wonderful to be here...for the first time ever Air Force One has
landed in Cuba," he said during a speech at the US embassy in Havana
shortly after his arrival.
"This is a historic visit and it's a historic opportunity to engage
directly with the Cuban people and to forge new agreements, commercial
deals, to build new ties between our two peoples."
Obama is set to meet Cuban dissidents during his visit, a move our
correspondent Newman said would have been considered "intolerable" by
the government in the past.
"The Cuban government is clearly not happy about it and to make the
point, as the president's plane was coming here, some 50 dissidents were
actually arrested."
The two countries have moved towards normalising relations after a
breakdown following the 1959 communist revolution led by former Cuban
President Fidel Castro.
Successive US government have tried to oust the Cuban leadership,
most notably during the CIA-backed Bay of Pigs invasion of 1961.
Former US President John F Kennedy imposed a trade embargo on Havana
in 1962 and in the same year the movement of nuclear missiles from the
Soviet Union to Cuba brought the countries close to nuclear war.
Since the restoration of diplomatic relations, the states have signed
telecommunication deals and put into place airline services but
obstacles remain, including the continuing embargo.
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