An investment fund and advisory offices will help Spanish companies working in Cuba to face threats from the application of the U.S. sanction measure.

The Spanish government will open a US$420 million investment fund and advisory offices to protect its companies from the threat of U.S.-based lawsuits due to President Donald Trump's new sanctions against Cuba, Spain's Minister of Industry, Commerce and Tourism Reyes Maroto announced Monday.

Four days after the Helms-Burton Act started to be fully applied, Minister Maroto met with Spanish businessmen in Cuba and told them that her government would develop accompanying measures to anticipate what "may be years of litigation."

"When we talk about investments, uncertainty is not good. However, by taking measures and providing certainty in terms of a road map... the commercial agenda we activate with the visit of the president (Pedro Sanchez) is to be maintained and even reinforced," she said.

The application of the 1996 Helms-Burton Act's Titles III & IV allows U.S. courts to prosecute international companies which have worked with properties nationalized in Cuba since 1959.

Title III allows U.S. citizens, including nationalized Cubans, to sue before U.S. courts for companies that supposedly benefit from properties in Cuba that were theirs or their family's before the Revolution. Title IV restricts the entry into the U.S. of those who have made deals with nationalized U.S. properties.

The purpose of the Helms-Burton Act is economic suffocation and preventing the economic development of #Cuba, attacking the sovereignty of third countries and destroying the Cuban Revolution. The implementation of the Helms-Burton Act will not put a stop on the march of Cubans. pic.twitter.com/vXcXNMbi3z — Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez (@DiazCanelB) May 3, 2019

The meme reads: "Here we are not afraid of either Burton or Bolton."

A U.S. Department of State spokeswoman told EFE that the Helms-Burton Act seeks to "deprive the Cuban government of the wealth it needs to stay in power" and punish it for supporting Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro.

Spain is the European country with the largest number of businesses in Cuba and its companies lead the hotel sector. Although there have been no lawsuits against its firms yet, it is expected that legal actions come shortly, in particular against Melia, Iberostar or the Barcelo Group which operate in more than 60 hotels through joint ventures with the Cuban government.

Tourism is the most dynamic Cuban industry and has about 75,000 rooms available, 45,000 of which are managed by foreign chains. Spain manages 2 out of 3 of these rooms, which allowed the European country to achieve an income of over US$1 billion in 2018.

.@Granma_Digital We have fought like men, and sometimes like giants, to be free. The application of Title III of the Helms-Burton Act will not stop Cubans from advancing. #UnblockCuba #Cuba https://t.co/t3hnc79efY pic.twitter.com/Vhli4GFkpa — EmbaCuba_Liberia (@EmbaCubaLiberia) May 6, 2019

The Spanish senior official also held meetings with the Cuban Minister of Foreign Trade and Foreign Investment, Rodrigo Malmierca and the Council of Ministers Vice President Ricardo Cabrisas. The meetings saw the signing of the new Cuban-Spain Country Partnership Framework, a four-year bilateral cooperation deal.

The activation of Titles III and IV will allow Trump to woo the Cuban vote in Florida, a state that will have a great significance in the 2020 presidential elections. Besides having political motivations, such measure already began to have economic effects.

The cruise company Carnival was sued on May 2 in the Miami federal courts for the use of port facilities in Cuba. The legal action was initiated by Javier Garcia Bengoechea, who claims to be the legitimate owner of the Santiago de Cuba port, and Mickael Behn, whose family owned the Havana Docks Corporation.​​​​​​​