Nice design! I just wonder what this "Millenium Sancti Iacobi" refers to ... St. James is said to have died (well, been killed) around the year 50. The city of Santiago de Cuba was founded in 1515, as the coin says too. Santiago de Compostela (in Galicia, Spain) is quite a bit older than 1,000 years, so -- I'm stumped. 1993 was a "holy year" there (Ano Santo Xacobeo) but why a millenium? Hmm. Christian
theres 390 listings for cuba peso http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_trk...TRC0&_nkw=cuba+silver+peso&_sacat=0&_from=R40
Leftovers of the Iron Curtain, The Helms-Burton Act... I have an eBay.ca account and being in Canada, technically, such restrictions should not apply to my Cuban coin listings... but I if I list with international shipping (including the US), would this listing get yanked? Time for an experiment...
This is a load of crap. Sanctions are against the country, with trade restrictions regarding import and export to/out the country itself. What is that got to do with the selling or buying Cuban coinage? The seller or buyer of these coins can be from anyplace in the world including US. If the coin is bought or sold outside Cuba, how would this fall under sanction restrictions since the owner is not Cuban/in Cuba.
This is my point too. People in Cuba and the Cuban government do not in any way benefit by people in the U.S. buying and selling obsolete Cuban coins. That's the whole purpose of an embargo - to punish the country in question. As to their still being other Cuban coins listed, I can't explain it, but here's what happened with me: I had maybe three Cuban coins listed. Someone purchased one with buy it now, but then I realized I had it mislabeled, so I asked him if he still wanted it and he said no. Then I tried to relist and got that message. My other two are still listed. When I saw people posting about it on the eBay discussion board, they said this policy started April 9.
The horse rider is Saint James born circa 6BC (this is a millenial 2000th anniversary of his birth). He is a very important figure is Spanish culture and religious celebration. The City of Santiago is clearly listed as it being the 478th Anniversary of it's founding on the coin reverse, which fits your 1515 + 478 = 1993 deduction.
Oh, I see. Well, I live in Europe, and here it would be difficult to not know about Santiago, the Way of St. James, etc. I just had no idea that "millenium" meant two milleniums on that coin. Thanks, and that is definitely a nice design! Christian
Stupid rule, I wonder if the U.S. govt called them up and politely asked them to enforce this:rollling: Someone may have flagged your listing as well, they might not actively search these, but will pull them when flagged by a user.
Try it out. On one hand, people here in the European Union, for example, with an eBay account have a contract with eBay Europe S.à r.l. in Luxembourg, not with eBay, Inc. in the US. Now eBay claims that, when it comes to US embargos, even eBay companies outside the US (including PayPal Europe, also in LU) have to comply. That is a violation of EU law according to a couple of legal experts here, but who would take eBay to court? The obvious solution is to buy from a dealer/platform that does not restrict its customers that way. Fortunately there are quite a few ... Christian
I suspect eBay is simply confused. There is a trade embargo in effect but once items are in the country I don't believe they are illegal. If you have something like cigars they will come after you to find the source but coins travel too freely to track like this. The cigars themselves aren't illegal, merely the importation. Most Cuban coins appear to come in through Canada.
and the rum! Look at this crazyness. http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/chile/090113/chileans-another-reason-dislike-wal-mart
Yeah, ask Microsoft. They just paid a gazillion dollar fine because they did "something" the EU didn't like. Not to worry, the EU will be history in 5 years.
Won't comment on your political wishes, but I suppose that US companies who not only do business in the EU but even have local companies here will be familiar with the laws that apply here. Whether they try to get around them or not is a different issue ... Christian