|      A trip to    Cuba by pop diva Beyonce and her hip-hop star husband Jay-Z was not illegal,    the US Treasury department has insisted. Beyonce and Jay-Z    celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary in the capital Havana last week. The trip had come under    criticism from Republican politicians who questioned whether the couple was    breaking an embargo forbidding US citizens from visiting the country. But senior Treasury    official Alastair Fitzpayne said in a letter to the concerned Republicans,    that the couple's controversial trip was part of a cultural exchange and did    not violate the economic embargo imposed on the island by the US. "It is our    understanding that the travellers in question travelled to Cuba pursuant to    an educational exchange trip organised by a group authorised by OFAC (Office    of Foreign Assets Control) to sponsor and organise programmes to promote    people-to-people contact in Cuba," Mr Fitzpayne said in the letter. 
 Last week, Republican    representatives Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida sent a    letter to Treasury official Adam Szubin, director of OFAC, requesting    information on the type of licence Beyonce and Jay-Z received before    travelling to Cuba. "As you know, US law    expressly prohibits the licensing of financial transactions for 'tourist    activities' in Cuba," the pair wrote. 
 Images of Beyonce and her    husband walking around Havana surrounded by hundreds of fans stoked    controversy in the US. Under the embargo    established against Cuba in 1962, US citizens cannot go to the island and    spend money without permission from the government. Mr Fitzpayne said OFAC    "adheres strictly to the requirement in the Trade Sanctions Reform and    Export Enhancement Act of 2000 that no licence be issued to travel to Cuba    for tourist activities, as defined in the Act". US citizens are not    allowed to travel to Cuba purely as holidaymakers. However, they can get    licences to go there on the grounds of academic, religious, journalistic or    cultural exchange trips. The so-called    "people-to-people" licences were reinstated under the Obama    administration.  |    
The couple photographing the crowds who came    to see them 
Cuban    fans wait to see the couple