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Friday, May 14, 2010

Cuban cultural icons get US visas

Cuban cultural icons get US visas

Two of Cuba's biggest stars have been granted visas to visit the United
States next month.

It will be the first time in decades that the folk singer Silvio
Rodriguez and the prima ballerina Alicia Alonso have been allowed to
perform in the US.

Both have been staunch supporters of Cuba's communist system.

President Obama has been encouraging people-to-people contacts with
Cuba, while maintaining a decades-long trade embargo.

Silvio Rodriguez, who gave his last concert in the US in 1979, is booked
for a multi-city tour starting in New York's Carnegie Hall on 4 June.

The 63-year-old musician is known throughout Latin America as the voice
of the Cuban revolution.

Change of tune?

But some of his more recent lyrics have included subtle criticism of
life in the communist-run island.

"If we don't change, they are going to change us," he said in a recent
interview.

Alicia Alonso, the legendary founder of the Cuban national ballet, is
also due to appear on stage in New York.

Aged nearly 90, she first rose to fame as a prima ballerina with the
American ballet company.

She's been granted a visa to attend a special anniversary performance on
3 June.

Cultural exchanges like this were routinely blocked under former
President George W Bush.

Relations have eased slightly under President Barack Obama - who has
lifted restrictions on Cuban Americans visiting the island - and there
has been an increase in academic and cultural exchanges.

But the American embargo is still in force, and Mr Obama has criticised
the treatment of dissidents and lack of democratic reform on the island.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8681635.stm

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