Most couldn't afford to stay, but it's a psychological lift
By Ray Sánchez | Havana Bureau
April 1, 2008
HAVANA - In the lobby of the grand Hotel Nacional, a small celebration 
erupted early Monday among workers who learned the ban on Cubans staying 
at tourist hotels had been lifted.
"We're all very happy," said Sandra, a young woman working the front 
desk. "I stayed here before the restrictions went into place in the 
early 1990s. We're celebrating."
At the Mercure Coralia Cuatro Palmas hotel, a beach resort in Varadero, 
a worker said the change was welcomed.
"Cubans should have the same rights as everyone else," he said. The 
hotel workers asked not to be identified because they were not 
authorized to speak to the media.
The end to what government critics have called tourism apartheid in Cuba 
came quietly after midnight Monday. No official announcement was made, 
but hotel workers and clerks at car rental companies said they were 
informed that Cubans could now rent cars and stay or use facilities such 
as gyms in tourist hotels across the island. The only limitation was 
whether they had the hard currency to pay the bill and could afford the 
stays.
The lifting of the hotel ban is the third such change in two weeks by 
Raul Castro and his new government. It follows the elimination of bans 
on cell phones and purchases of certain consumer electronics, which go 
on sale today. Purchasing the previously prohibited goods and services 
will require hard currency in a country where the average monthly wage 
is about $20. Analysts and human rights observers said the change was 
more symbolic than economic.
"The change is significant," said William LeoGrande, a Cuba expert at 
American University in Washington, D.C. "Even if most Cubans can't 
afford to spend $200 to stay at the Hotel Nacional, they no longer have 
to feel like they're prohibited from doing it. It strikes a blow against 
the whole idea of tourism apartheid."
Now when relatives come from abroad, Cubans can stay with them in their 
hotels or dine with them in the dining rooms, something they were unable 
to do under the ban.
Elizardo Sanchez, a longtime dissident who heads the Cuban Commission on 
Human Rights and National Reconciliation, said the state was only 
looking to tap in to a new source of hard currency.
"This is good news, but the government is merely following Article 42 of 
the constitution, which says that all Cubans have a right to stay at any 
hotel in any city in the country," he said. "That constitutional 
principle was violated for decades."
The restriction was introduced after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet 
Union forced Cuba to open to foreign tourists and investment.
Although tourism generates more than $2 billion a year in foreign 
exchange, the number of visitors has dropped in recent years. About 60 
percent of Cubans have access to hard currency from cash remittances 
sent by relatives living abroad or through work with foreigners.
"It seems a mockery of ordinary Cubans who earn an average salary of 
about 15 or 20 convertible pesos a month," Sanchez said. "How can these 
people stay at a hotel like the Ambos Mundos, which charges 170 
convertible pesos [$183] per night?"
In the lobby of the Hotel Florida in Old Havana, the young manager 
predicted Monday that lifting the ban would have little effect on his 
business.
"The change will have less effect on the pricier hotels in the historic 
district than in the cheaper hotels at the beaches," he said. "We're 
happy to receive Cubans but we don't have a lot of hope that many Cubans 
will stay here."
A double room at the Florida Hotel is $183 per night, about nine months' 
salary for most state workers.
On Monday, the Web site of Granma, the newspaper of Cuba's Communist 
Party, made no mention of the change, causing confusion at some hotels 
in the capital. Some front desk workers said they had received no 
official notice of the move.
Since officially succeeding his ailing brother, Fidel, on Feb. 24, the 
younger Castro has legalized products and services that Cubans had been 
forced to buy on the black market.
The changes may be setting the stage for a revaluation of the Cuban peso 
and possible elimination of the dual-currency system that has 
impoverished millions of Cubans, analysts said. State salaries are paid 
in the nearly worthless peso, while many desirable products and services 
are priced in convertible pesos, or CUCs, that can be exchanged for hard 
currency. The exchange rate for one CUC is 24 pesos.
Raul Castro hinted at such changes during his inaugural speech last month.
"He would be a foolish politician to promise change in issues that 
important and then not deliver," LeoGrande said.
Ray Sánchez can be reached at rlsanchez@sun-sentinel.com.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-flarndcuba0401sbapr01,0,5790466.story
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