Havana's El Trigal Market Reappears / Ernesto Garcia Diaz
Posted on November 23, 2013
Havana, Cuba, November, www.cubanet.org — The Cuban regime, in pursuit 
of "unleashing the productive forces," has established, through Law 
Decree No. 318/2013, the new "Rule About the Commercialization of 
Agricultural Products in the provinces of Artemisa, Mayabeque and 
Havana."  The communist leaders say that this new regulation is directed 
to eliminate the mechanisms that hinder the process of agricultural 
commercialization, as well as the "quest to make it more dynamic, 
efficient and flexible."
The official newspaper Granma circulates, with optimism, various 
articles about this new Commercialization System which will begin to 
function this coming December.  The Havana population receives the news 
with despair and reservations, because it does not see substantial 
changes in the scarcity of food, their high prices, or the lack of 
quality and variety.
Producers continue to be circumspect because although the regulation 
permits the sale and purchase of the surplus once the contracts with the 
State have been fulfilled, the control and Statism that the regime 
maintains make them doubt that this will happen.  Also because the State 
does not sell them the necessary equipment to assure the safety of their 
products to their final destination.
It is reasonable to remember that during the decade of the '80's, in the 
capital of the Island, three farmers market hubs operated: Berroa, Ocho 
Vias and El Trigal. These centers have been led by the Council of the 
Administration of Provincial Popular Power of Havana and the ministers 
of Interior Commerce and Agriculture.
For many years, the commercial organization created facilitated the 
illegal markets or "black market," which occasioned crimes of larceny, 
theft and diversion of resources, with the consequent loss of millions. 
  Audits and inspections by the Agricultural Ministry and other State 
agencies have reflected excessive costs and alleged losses.  El Trigal, 
not a few times, was implicated and closed for said causes.
On the other hand, on the esplanade of 114th Street and the Pinar del 
Rio Highway, belonging to the Marianao township, a wholesale 
agricultural market functions in the open, attended by productive 
methods, points of sale and brokers. This structure, headed by Colonel 
Samblon, will close in December, and has not been exempt from acts of 
vandalism and a regulated commercial organization.
The peculiar and striking thing is that the colonel mentioned, converted 
into the president of the non-agricultural cooperative who will operate 
the El Trigal market, will head that center under the supervision of 
General Colás, according to what I was able to learn there.
The farmer's market will offer to sellers and buyers a night service 
between six in the afternoon and six in the morning.  To that end, it 
will rent spaces for the sale of merchandise.  The entry (as much for 
trucks as for persons), the loading and unloading, the weighing and 
other secondary services will be leased and collected by the cooperative.
Also, the competitors will be obliged to leave the market at six in the 
morning with their unsold merchandise in tow, in order to get in a new 
line and enter the enclosure again at six in the afternoon.  An 
agonizing way of marketing, conserving and preserving perishable 
products in an installation whose refrigerators are not operational!  In 
the daytime they will weigh the trucks that come from the provinces, for 
their distribution to the basic units or network of markets.
It is anecdotal to remember when the communist ex-dictator Fidel Castro 
Ruz, in August 1960, before 600 cooperative coordinators, said, "Now we 
enter a higher level, now we enter into a new project, a new purpose, a 
new aspiration: the aspiration to diversify agriculture."  The 
ex-leader, with his "development programs," years later destroyed the 
productive and industrial base of the Cuban economy.  Will we now be 
journeying through the dreams and deliriums of the General President?
In summary, the new commercial organization that the regime tried to 
implement will enrich the cooperative businessmen of military ancestry, 
at the expense of producers, private sales representatives and the 
people, who will continue enduring the experiments of the dictatorship 
of the Castro brothers.
Ernesto Garcia Diaz
Cubanet, November 12, 2013
Translated by mlk
Source: "Havana's El Trigal Market Reappears / Ernesto Garcia Diaz | 
Translating Cuba" - 
http://translatingcuba.com/havanas-cornfield-reappears-ernesto-garcia-diaz/
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