U.S. President Barack Obama
and his wife Michelle exit Air Force One at Havana's airport.
In a letter to the Cuban
dissident group the Ladies in White on 10 March, Mr Obama said: "I will
raise these issues directly with President Castro."
The talks - the fourth
meeting between the two leaders - will take place at the Palace of the
Revolution in Havana, where Mr Castro is expected to raise the continued US
economic sanctions on Cuba.
Mr Obama is under pressure
in the US to urge the communist government in Cuba to allow dissent from
political opponents and to further open its Soviet-style command economy.
Aides have said he will
encourage economic reforms and call for greater access to the internet for
Cubans.
He is also expected to
announce that Google has won a deal to start providing more Wi-Fi and broadband
access on the island, ABC News reported.
Mr Castro has said Cuba
will not waver from its 57-year-old revolution and government officials have
said the US needs to end its economic embargo and return the Guantanamo Bay
naval base before normal relations can be restored.
Mr Obama has urged Congress
to end the 54-year-old embargo, but has been rejected by the Republican
leadership.
Instead he has used his
executive authority to loosen restrictions on trade and travel with the
Caribbean island.
On Sunday, Cuban Foreign
Trade Minister Rodrigo Malmierca said: "We think the US government can
take more steps to send clear and direct signals in this direction."
The two leaders met during
a regional summit in Panama in April last year, as well as at Nelson Mandela's
funeral in 2013 and the UN General Assembly in September.


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