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Internet use is limited in Cuba, which blames U.S.

LINK  The Internet is a luxury to the privileged few in Cuba, and the government there says the U.S. economic embargo is at fault.   BY FRANCES ROBLES.  frobles@herald.com

Oscar Visiedo says that when he helped bring the Internet to Cuba in 1992, he faced three daunting obstacles: the U.S. economic embargo, technological shortcomings and ominous state security.

Thirteen years later, steep prices and strict government controls largely keep ordinary Cubans from the World Wide Web, while the island's authorities still blame the embargo as the reason the country stalled on the information highway.= So, even while the Internet boomed in Cuba -- the government alone has at least 200 sites -- usage remains among the lowest in the Western Hemisphere, and the hurdles remain unchanged.

''There is a fear -- a fear that is practically pathological -- of access to information,'' said Visiedo, who worked at the government office that introduced Cuba to the Internet, back when nobody there knew what it was. He now works in management information systems at Carlos Albizu University in Miami.

December 20, 2005 in The View from Havana | Permalink | Comments (0)

LaAm Does Not Trust Democracy

Havana, Nov 27 (Prensa Latina) Latin American people´s confidence in democratic government has taken a sharp downturn in the last few years, Atilio Boron, secretary general of the Latin American Council for Social Sciences reported.

In his lecture on foreign debt and government discipline, the expert told the 450 delegates and guests at the sixth Cuban National Association of Economists and Accountants (ANEC) a recent survey showed only 19 percent approval of democracy, down from 41 percent in 1997.

The Argentine expert, a distinguished member of ANEC, said the main reason is the foreign debt that countries of the region face.= Decisions adopted in the last few years by the so-called democracies of the area originated outside the region, in New York- eye of Davos, he pointed out.

Boron also said the United States and financing organizations such as the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and the Inter-American Development Bank decide the fate of Latin American populations.= Professor Johs Saxe Fernandez, of the Mexican Autonomous University, referred to the "iron triangle" of Latin American governments, corporations and the US congress.

Cuban Foreign Affairs Vice-Minister Eumelio Caballero likewise highlighted the international situation in which Cuba faces the expanding US economic blockade.

December 20, 2005 in The View from Havana | Permalink | Comments (1)

Cuba announces further downsizing of sugar industry

LINK    Wed Sep 7, 2005. By Marc Frank
HAVANA, Sept 7 (Reuters) - Cuba plans to shut down more sugar mills and replace them with food processing facilities, the Sugar Ministry said this week, in the first official confirmation many mills would be idled after 71 were closed in 2002.

"This period, through 2007, includes the closing for the next harvest of another group of mills that will be temporarily preserved," the Communist party daily Granma said on Wednesday, reporting on a meeting between ministry officials and workers.

Warehouses and workshops will be put to other uses and "more than 100 factories to produce pastas, chocolate, candy, process soy beans and corn will replace mills," Granma said...

September 22, 2005 in The View from Havana | Permalink | Comments (0)

Capitalism in Cuba

FROM GRANMA. BY JOAQUIN ORAMAS

The so-called "transition" aspired to by President Bush and the Miami anti-Cuban mafia is reminiscent of that pseudo-republic where corruption, unemployment, illiteracy and ill-health prevailed as an example of the final years of capitalism on the island.

Cuba entered in its final decade of capitalism (1950-1960) converted into an insufficiently developed country with no organic integration between its productive and consumer elements, with a majority percentage of rural over industrial employment and a considerable rate of unemployment in the face of the constant growth of the working population....

LINK

September 17, 2005 in The View from Havana | Permalink | Comments (0)

Cuba's latest lifeline

Chávez-Castro accords counter strengthened U.S. embargo.
By Ruth Morris. Posted September 11 2005.  HAVANA.

When Cuba's Fidel Castro and Venezuela's Hugo Chávez took to the airwaves for a six-hour presidential chat show late last month, their chummy relationship was on open display.= Dressed in military fatigues, the two patted shoulders, joked about Chávez's driving, and reminisced about how they had been dining together during a raid on assassination plotters.

But the cozy friendship, and the economic bonds that cement it, are increasingly irksome to U.S. government officials. In addition to launching frequent verbal attacks on U.S. "imperialism," Castro and Chávez have deepened a trade agreement that brings 90,000 barrels of Venezuelan crude to the communist island a day -- at rock-bottom prices and on relaxed payment schedules.

Now, as crude prices soar, analysts say the preferential treatment Cuba receives from oil-rich Venezuela is providing a veritable lifeline -- not only keeping the Cuban economy afloat, but also subverting tightened U.S. economic sanctions on the island.

"Venezuela is the banker," said John Kavulich, a senior policy advisor to the New York-based U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council. He said the financial aid had allowed Cuba to scale back economic reforms that had been designed to counter the impact of the U.S. embargo on trade and travel to Cuba....

September 11, 2005 in The View from Havana | Permalink | Comments (0)

Can we learn from Cuba's lesson?

The tiny country is known for its hurricane planning that keeps its people prepared and fatalities low.
By SUSAN TAYLOR MARTIN, Times Senior Correspondent.  Published September 9, 2005.

Before Hurricane Ivan whipped Cuba last year with 160 mph winds, the government  evacuated nearly 2-million people. The result: not a single death or serious injury.

Although it is a small, poor country in the heart of hurricane alley, Cuba is widely acknowledged to do an exemplary job of protecting its 11.3-million residents from natural disasters. Its record is even more impressive in light of the catastrophic loss of life that the United States - the world's richest and most technologically advanced nation - is experiencing from Hurricane Katrina.

Cuba has not only an evacuation plan but an overall plan for hurricanes and other disasters that is very well developed and organized," says Dusan Zupka of the United Nations' International Secretariat for Disaster Reduction. "I would dare to say that Cuba is a good example for other countries in terms of preparedness and prevention."

Cuba's form of government - communist and authoritarian - undoubtedly helps it to quickly mobilize in emergencies. But the real key to success is a "culture of safety" in which people at all levels of government and society are committed to reducing risks and saving lives, according to a study by Oxfam,  a charity that works in ravaged areas worldwide.

"The single most important thing about disaster response in Cuba is that people cooperate en masse," the study found. As Hurricane Georges approached in 1998, a foreign aid worker living in Havana was astonished by the attention to preparedness, she told Oxfam.

"We had a steady stream of neighbors in and out of our apartment, counseling us to fill the bathtub with water, tape the windows, unplug all electrical items, get batteries or candles and put the car in the garage."

At the same time, a neighborhood representative from the Federation of CubanWomen checked on the "vulnerable population," including elderly people and single mothers who might need help evacuating. "Everyone, even the children, knew what to do," the foreigner noted.

Despite its poverty, Cuba has a high literacy rate - almost 96 percent. Instruction in disaster reparedness begins in grade school and continues through higher education and into the workplace. Under a 1976 law, every adult receives civil defense training.

Before a new hurricane season starts on June 1, authorities review and revise disaster plans based on the prior year's experience. In May, the entire country goes through a two-day hurricane drill, called meteoro, that includes such practical measures as trimming tree limbs and checking for weaknesses in dams before a storm hits.

Most important, all those living in high-risk areas know beforehand where totake refuge - in sturdy homes on high ground or in group shelters, usually schools. Every shelter is stocked with food, water and medical supplies. There are even plans for moving electrical appliances and other valuables.= "That is interesting because in countries where this is not the case, some people are very hesitant to evacuate because they are afraid of looting,"  Zupka says.

When a hurricane threatens, Cuba mobilizes under National Civil Defense, which coordinates preparedness from the federal level on down. Radio and TV broadcast continual updates on the storm from the country's meteorology institute.  "They invented the science of hurricane forecasting, and they have a rather robust technical capability," says Frank Lepore, public affairs manager for the U.S. National Hurricane Center.  To reduce economic losses, cattle are moved to higher ground and crops are harvested if time permits. All forms of transportation - buses, helicopters, even horse carts - are pressed into service to get people to shelter.

One strength of Cuba's disaster preparedness system is that local and provincial officials also serve as the civil defense officials. "It means that local groups are taking orders from someone familiar to them,  not a stranger brought in for the duration of an emergency," the Oxfam study  found. In the United States, by contrast, response to Katrina has been coordinated by federal officials, many of whom lack detailed knowledge of the Gulf Coast area and thus have been slow to act, critics charge.

Cuba revamped its civil defense system after a 1963 hurricane killed more than 1,000 people. Since then, disaster planning has been so finely honed that just 16 lives were lost between 1996 and 2002 despite six hurricanes, three of them major.

Cuba can offer lessons to the United States, especially in evacuationprocedures, the Oxfam study says. Hurricane Katrina is thought to have killed thousands of residents who refused to leave or lacked the resources to do so.= The U.S. and Cuban governments do not have diplomatic relations, and President Fidel Castro typically rejects American offers of aid to protest the U.S. trade embargo on his nation. The most recent offer - and refusal - came after Hurricane Dennis struck Cuba in July and caused a high death toll by local standards - 16 people.

In Katrina's wake, Castro has offered to send 1,586 doctors to the nearby Gulf Coast, where many people reportedly have died for lack of medical attention.

"These doctors . . . could already be there offering their services," Castro told volunteers Sunday as reported by Cuban media. "Forty-eight hours have passed and we have not received any response to our reiterated offer."

As of Thursday, the State Department said only that "every offer is still being considered."
Susan Taylor Martin can be contacted at susan@sptimes.com. © Copyright 2003 St. Petersburg Times. All rights reserved

September 09, 2005 in The View from Havana | Permalink | Comments (0)

Cubans await Castro's elusive Chinese kitchen

LINK  Marc Frank. Reuters. Monday, September 5, 2005; 8:49 AM.
CAMAGUEY, Cuba (Reuters) - Six months after President Fidel Castro promised that every Cuban household would get an electric rice cooker and other appliances, most Cubans are wondering where they are.

In announcing the plan earlier this year, Castro took to the stage like a television game show host touting Chinese-made rice cookers, fans, stoves, washing machines and other electric appliances that would soon be available.

The goods were considered evidence of communist Cuba's recovery from the deep economic crisis the Caribbean island sank into following the demise of the Soviet Union.

But so far few have been sold, though some state stores have begun offering pressure cookers made in China and Brazil, and some residents are growing impatient....

September 05, 2005 in The View from Havana | Permalink | Comments (0)

For most, dissident meeting was a mystery

For most, dissident meeting was a mystery.           Published May 29, 2005.

HAVANA · The Cuban flags and banners that decorated an unprecedented dissident meeting here last week with slogans like, "For Cuba the time has come," are folded up and stored away.

Scores of plastic chairs that dotted the hilly orchard where dissidents pledged to change what they called Cuba's "totalitarian regime" are neatly stacked and stowed.

After a flurry of anticipation and activity, including visits from a half-dozen foreign diplomats, 150 dissidents and an unknown number of state security agents, the modest Rio Verde community on the outskirts of Havana has returned to its pastoral tranquility leaving many neighbors wondering what all the commotion was about.

Within Cuba's embattled opposition movement some lauded the meeting of the Assembly to Promote Civil Society as a historic turning point in their struggle for democracy. Others derided it as a fraud aimed at weakening the dissident community.

But most people in Rio Verde, and across Cuba, knew little about the event that drew international attention, including a videotaped statement of support from President Bush delivered via laptop computer...

June 02, 2005 in The View from Havana | Permalink | Comments (0)

Flow of funds to Cuba holds steady

Cubadollarsigns_1The amount of money sent to Cubans by relatives in the United States has not changed a year after new restrictions were implemented, according to pollsters.

Herald.com Posted on Thu, May. 26, 2005 BY NANCY SAN MARTIN.  WASHINGTON.

Cubans living in the United States still send an estimated $460 million a year to relatives on the island despite restrictions tightened by the Bush administration last summer, according to a poll released by a Coral Gables firm Wednesday.

But a portion of the Cubans on the island who receive the cash transfers believe they are getting less money, according to a separate and less scientific survey conducted inside the island by a Washington-based think tank.

The assumption: That Fidel Castro's government is taking a bigger bite of the remittances, one of the key sources of income in an island where the economy was devastated by the 1990s collapse of Soviet subsidies.

''Now that it is clear to them how much money is arriving, [the Cuban government] is now getting a higher and higher percentage of that money,'' said pollster Sergio Bendixen of Bendixen & Associates.

The results of the Bendixen survey, presented during a forum at the think tank Inter-American Dialogue, indicate that 69 percent of respondents continue to send the same amount of money as before President Bush tightened restrictions on remittances to Cuba last June as part of a larger effort to keep U.S. dollars out of the government coffers and hasten a transition to democracy....

May 28, 2005 in NOT the Conventional Wisdom, The View from Havana, The View from Washington | Permalink | Comments (0)

Art Deco Group Debating Whether to Hold World Congress in Cuba

Story             BY CASEY WOODS.
An international network of Art Deco design enthusiasts that has roots in Miami is grappling with another South Florida obsession: the bitter, seemingly endless, battle over how to deal with Cuba.

Members of the International Coalition of Art Deco Societies, a loose association of groups dedicated to preserving the streamlined architectural style, are locked in a battle over whether to hold the group's 2007 World Congress on Art Deco in the island nation.

Those who support the notion say that politics shouldn't thwart efforts to save the country's imperiled architecture. Others say it would be morally wrong to go and, for members from the United States, almost certainly illegal.

In recent weeks, the conflict has exploded into a hostile volley of e-mails -- one of which alleged that an ICADS member was accepting handouts from the Cuban government in exchange for striving to ''deliver'' the convocation. The accused member has threatened legal action in response.

The rancor has astonished members on both sides of the divide. Many wonder if their once-genteel organization, which has hundreds of members in countries as far away as New Zealand and Australia, is forever changed.

''It's been a mean two years, and I've never experienced anything like this in my 50 years doing volunteer work,'' said Rex Ball, the president of the Tulsa Art Deco Society, who has held the ICADS leadership post since 2003. ``Before, the organization was such a pleasant social comrades kind of thing, and I certainly hope this won't split it for good.''...

May 28, 2005 in Cultura, The View from Havana, The View from Washington | Permalink | Comments (0)

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