Cuba baseball tour organizers see it as good start to addressing defection issues – Los Angeles Times

The story of Yasiel Puig‘s escape from Cuba reads like a crime thriller, complete with speedboats, kidnappings, betrayal, drug kingpens and murder.

So like most baseball fans, Dan Halem was appalled the first time he heard it.

But unlike most fans, Halem, as Major League Baseball‘s chief legal officer, had the power to do something about it.

“The trafficking issue has been very eye-opening,” he said. “It’s not transparent to us. And it’s very troubling to our owners and our commissioner.

“That’s why we’re very focused on fixing this issue. It really is our top priority.”

It won’t be an easy fix. Yet the will to address the problem may open an avenue toward repairing three generations of bitterness and mistrust between Cuba and the U.S. And perhaps even more significantly, Halem now has a willing ally in Antonio Castro, son of former Cuban President Fidel Castro and vice president of the Cuban baseball federation, who last week welcomed a high-level MLB delegation to the island for a historic three-day goodwill tour

Relations between the two countries have been frozen in a Cold War stance for nearly 60 years before beginning to thaw last December, when President Obama and his Cuban counterpart, Raul Castro, announced steps toward normalizing ties.