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Wednesday, December 31, 2008

LA CONSPIRACIÓN DEL SILENCIO TOCA A YOANI SÁNCHEZ

LA CONSPIRACIÓN DEL SILENCIO TOCA A YOANI SÁNCHEZ
2008-12-30.
José Vilasuso

(www.miscelaneasdecuba.net).- Los comunistas, silencian, acusan y
encarcelan injustamente a quienes les hacen sombra para evitar que a
ellos, justamente, se les silencie, acuse y encarcele.

Parangoneando a Fedor Mijailovich Dostoiewski.

El tres de diciembre del 2008, ante la noticia de que Yoani Sánchez,
bloguera por la libre, acababa de ser citada por la Policía Nacional
Revolucionaria a la estación local; me anticipé contrariamente a mi
costumbre, a emitir unos comentarios sucintos corriendo todos los
riesgos inherentes.

Escribí. Supongamos que algo similar ocurriera en El Salvador, Chile o
Brasil. Seguramente a estas horas el cable internacional estaría
ardiendo, al estallar, dada la proyección superlativa del suceso.

A sus efectos, distinguidos ganadores de los más codiciados premios de
Literatura, La Paz, cineastas de universal reconocimiento, parejas
progresistas de Hollywood, homosexuales, lesbianas y pedófilos de pura
cepa, aborteros consuetudinarios, comentaristas culturales de
indiscutible prestigio, el Gobierno de España, y todo un abanico
abarcador de nombres y nombradías seleccionados escrupulosamente entre
lo más granado del intelecto contemporáneo, estaría en jaque, a pesar de
haber pasado sus setenta abriles cargados de condecoraciones, acumulados
montones de diplomas, y escondidas las botellas de Champán porque los
médicos se lo tienen prohibido.

Pero en el caso de Yoani Sánchez ni remotamente ha sucedido como lo
hubiéramos deseado. La paz octaviana propia de esos dómines egregios,
abaciales, y tan pundonorosos los hace disfrutar su otoño ceremonial que
no se verá alterado por nimiedades.

No es dable esperarlo; al menos de mi parte. En consecuencia considero
que enumerar ahora todo punto racionalmente convincente en casos
semejantes, como represión a la libre información, hostigamiento a una
mujer, tapabocas a corriente de criterio joven, censura contra Internet,
etc.

Nada de esto hubiera sido, debidamente, tomado en cuenta en este "undo
feliz" a lo Aldor Huxley. No precisamente porque el tema sea harto
conocido, carente de actualidad o interés. Tampoco jamás la opinión
pública mundial ha perdido sus valores, ni el ser humano acalla su
conciencia.

Aunque por nuestra parte la omisión predominará dado que esta columna
debe por ahora aprovecharse para sacar a la luz otros perfiles de esa
vuelta de orejas esperada.

Sencillamente se pretende exponer otra cara de la baraja. Sin descontar
que plumas y teclas mejor reconocidas que la nuestra ya dieron en el
clavo ardiendo con certera puntería.

Retomo pues la idea. Escribo. Yoani Sánchez representa una vez más la
voz de los de abajo, la juventud, los desconocidos, las víctimas que
perennemente fueron orilladas o aplastados por lo que se llama el statu
quo, el poder, la derecha.

Un ojeo al pasado glorioso corrobora los ecos contestatarios, las
protestas por dar a conocer la noticia en caliente, perseguidos,
torturados, desaparecidos que suman dígitos incalculables en el trayecto
de los dos últimos siglos.

Así fue escrita la historia moderna desde tiempos del gran Alfonso
Lamartine y se prosigue rubricando al mismo compás en esa sociedad a la
que con excelente humor negro bautizamos como de la información.

De la misma manera acentúo que su componente integral no es de forma
exclusiva, aquello que no menos eufemísticamente reconocemos con el mote
de izquierdismo.

No; los camaradas de la tea incendiaria y la boina del Che no poseen el
monopolio en esta conspiración del silencio. Su componente integral es
más variado, compacto y complejo. Su ideario, los que lo conservan,
incluye a la reacción más empedernida, nada menos.

Recordemos, o mejor, que algunos descubran de una vez cómo los extremos
se tocan. Puesto que en esta corrida participan toreros de España y
México, gladiadores de Atenas y Esparta, Cartago y Roma, Kutusov y
Napoleón, Churchil y Hitler, los Yankees de Nueva York contra los
Medias Rojas de Boston.

Por carambola o rocambole la conspiración del silencio, en el caso de la
ganadora del Premio Ortega y Gasset en la red, realiza su labor de zapa
con la complicidad expresa o tácita de los intereses más adversos y
enconados activos en nuestra esfera de influencias.

Todos coinciden en mantener los labios cerrados, bien o mal cerrados. Es
que no responden sólo a estándares al punto conocidos y de los que se
esperaría que a la larga redundaran a favor de la verdad mediática.

Caramba, en estas latitudes se ha echado al olvido aquel viejo adagio:
"de la discusión sale la luz." Ese establecimiento, esa normalidad, el
burocratismo de oficio entre los medios ni se ha enterado que en otros
tiempos se buscaba la veracidad de muchas cosas, la luz a la vuelta del
camino.

Pero pretender hoy algo semejante sería hablarles en chino pekinés, o
español chabacano, el peor dialecto de Filipinas.

Con razón Tom Wolfe los califica de periodismo canalla. Es mejor decir
que no se salen de una programación, línea trazada, donde los supuestos
méritos de la libertad, democracia, y demás monserga, para ellos esto
último, se canalizan mediando elementos taxativamente clasificados,
estudiados y reconocibles en claves.

El periodista de mayor fuste es quien mejor repite los lugares comunes.
Luego entonces, al referirse a situaciones nuevas que, todavía no
aparecen en sus manuales, agendas y textos oficiales, a dichos
amanuenses y corifeos no les corresponde usarlas puesto que pudieran
constituir innovaciones que se salen de la línea.

Desconocen olímpicamente a todo vocero fuera de gríngola. Los catalogan
cual casos desconocidos cuyo origen ignoran, y como contradicciones
inexplicables o inexplicables contradicciones que a sus directrices no
competen.

Ellos tienen por misión primordial conservar el establecimiento a toda
costa, estrictamente. Sostener a flote el mundo tangible de la
mediocridad. Poner el lugar común al derecho y al revés. El culto
religioso a la monotonía. Copiar el úkase con puntos y comas.

No se pierda de vista que para la gran prensa internacional, con
honrosas excepciones, Cuba no se rige por una dictadura que dura medio
siglo. Para ellos el doctor Fidel Castro Ruz es expresidente de la
República. Cuidado con atribuirle esos calificativos propios de peleles
al servicio del imperialismo yankee, nombrados por el embajador de
Washington en Costa Rica, o Colombia.

Continuará. . .

http://www.miscelaneasdecuba.net/web/article.asp?artID=18703

50 years ago, Cuba's rebels took control

THE CUBAN REVOLUTION
50 years ago, Cuba's rebels took control
Cuban history was made on New Year's Eve 1958 when Fulgencio Batista
fled and insurgents led by Fidel Castro declared victory.
BY FRANCES ROBLES
frobles@MiamiHerald.com

Dec. 31, 1958, in Havana began as a subdued New Year's Eve, a reflection
of tense, unstable times. Explosions sometimes went off in theaters back
then, and police trying to quash an insurrection often stopped and
searched folks on the street.

Looking to avoid trouble, most Cubans celebrated safely by staying in.
That year, many of the people who would become Miami's top civic and
political leaders were teenagers huddled at home with parents afraid to
let them revel outside.

Rebel leader Fidel Castro was in the eastern Sierra Maestra mountains,
preparing to attack the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba while he
negotiated with top military commanders and dictated memos through the
night. Argentine doctor and rebel leader Ernesto ''Ché'' Guevara had
just defeated the Cuban army in the central city of Santa Clara, and
Castro's younger brother Raúl was poised to take the far eastern city of
Guantánamo.

Castro did not know that dictator Fulgencio Batista had spent the day
gathering up cash and friends in preparation for leaving the country.
Top army generals frantically tried to come up with a new president by
lunchtime.

`LIKE A HURRICANE'

'It's like a hurricane is coming: `I need to buy this and do that,' ''
said former Miami Herald journalist Roberto Fabricio, who with Miami
Herald staff writer John Dorschner co-authored the 1980 book Winds of
December, a recounting of Batista's final days. ``You know it's coming
some day.

``The hurricane had come.''

Fifty years ago, a new chapter emerged in Cuban history: A weary army
was no longer willing to die to support an unpopular regime. A growing
rebel militia was winning important victories as top generals secretly
negotiated with Castro and his men. With military aid from the United
States cut off, Batista found himself a defeated dictator presiding over
rivers of blood.

Seven years after taking power in a coup, it was time for the former
sergeant who dominated Cuban politics for three decades to go. He
gathered his allies for a subdued New Year's Eve party at Camp Columbia
base just outside Havana, where he shared the decision to flee with only
his closest advisors.

Winds of December describes ladies tripping over their silk gowns in the
rush toward waiting black limos.

At 12:35 a.m., Batista quit. At dawn, a plane with 44 people aboard,
including Batista, took off for the Dominican Republic, triggering a mad
scramble in Havana. Batista's allies fled by plane or yacht as the news
spread by shortwave radio. They were in mortal danger, and they knew it.

'I got a call about 3 or 4 in the morning saying, `The man has left,' ''
said Cuban historian Enrique Ros, father of Miami Republican U.S. Rep.
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. ``I honestly thought Fidel Castro had withdrawn.
Everyone was surprised.''

Huber Matos was the rebel leader who led troops in Santiago de Cuba. He
had represented Castro days earlier in negotiations with Maj. Gen.
Eulogio Cantillo -- head of the army's Oriente forces, on the eastern
end of the island -- who had reneged on a deal to surrender.

PLANS TO SEIZE CITY

Matos had orders to take Santiago by force. He had been up until 4 a.m.
mapping out plans to seize the city.

'I woke up at 7 in the morning after making plans all night and said to
the men, `Listen, the national radio is mute. Something is going on.'
Not a single station was transmitting anything,'' said Matos, who later
fell out of favor with Castro and was jailed.

With no time to consult Castro, former guerrilla journalist Carlos
Franqui, a member of Castro's July 26 Movement directorate and head of
Radio Rebelde, took to the airwaves.

Messengers ran to tell Castro, who was positioned in a sugar mill some
40 miles north of Santiago.

''I had to start making decisions that were the directorate's or Fidel's
to make,'' said Franqui, who left Cuba in 1968 and now lives in Puerto
Rico. ``It would have been fatal for Radio Rebelde to have been silent.
I decided to take responsibility and make logical decisions.''

Batista had fled, but the guerrilla war was not won.

Gen. Cantillo was busy in Havana finding a senior magistrate to take
Batista's place, as the constitution dictated. Cantillo enlisted an
unwilling judge in his bathrobe.

Castro wanted to fill the power vacuum himself. Furious and fearful that
the rebels would be shut out, he started barking orders.

''Naturally the first of January was also a terrible day,'' Castro said
in Franqui's 1976 book, Diary of the Cuban Revolution. ``We were
betrayed, and an attempt was made to snatch victory from the people. We
had to act very swiftly.''

Castro hustled to the eastern town of Palma Soriana to record radio
broadcasts.

Guerrilla commander Camilo Cienfuegos went to Camp Columbia near Havana,
while Raúl Castro was sent to force Guantánamo's surrender. Guevara was
dispatched to the La Cabaña fortress in Havana harbor.

''Revolution, yes!'' Castro proclaimed over the airwaves. ``Military
coup, no!''

''It was a plan that was made and executed with such precision that
Batista fell practically on the day we thought he would fall, and
Santiago de Cuba was taken more or less on the day that we thought we
would take it,'' Castro said in the 1976 book.

``They attempted to snatch the triumph from us, and if there hadn't been
swift action, the consequences would have been serious.''

Some people in Havana acted fast, too: Jubilant crowds looted casinos
and ransacked the homes of Batista loyalists.

''I could see people running carrying drapes, lamps, air conditioners,''
Fabricio, then 12, recalled watching from his apartment building across
the Riviera Hotel on Havana's famed seawall. ``They took doors off the
hinges. The other unpopular part of the regime was the parking meters,
and people were taking bats to them.''

Brothers to the Rescue founder José Basulto, then 18 and heading off for
college, remembers people preparing Molotov cocktails at the
long-shuttered University of Havana while slot machines tumbled down
city streets.

'There was an atmosphere of trouble. Everybody was thinking: `What's
next?' '' Basulto said. ``I remember that I walked into a police station
and took a gun for myself. The police were there, looking at us. They
were on the job, but not acting on it.''

Matos' attack on Santiago never materialized, as military leaders easily
gave in. Raúl Castro took Moncada barracks without firing a shot.

VICTORY DECLARED

That evening, Castro declared victory from the balcony of Santiago de
Cuba's City Hall. Franqui remembers the throngs of thousands who rushed
to greet Castro and touch his scraggly beard.

''It was a bit cultish,'' Franqui said. ``It disgusted me.''

With lawyer Manuel Urrutia named president, Castro began a weeklong trek
to Havana, where he was greeted like a messiah. He did not arrive until
Jan. 8, and did not officially appoint himself to the top job for
another 45 days.

''I don't remember anyone who was unhappy, or sad, or concerned about
what had just happened. It was just the opposite,'' remembers Miami Dade
College President Eduardo Padrón, who was 14. ``On that date, Jan. 1, we
really did not imagine the whole magnitude of what would transpire years
to come. At that moment, it did not occur to us that this would turn
into something we would dislike or actually hate or that it would last
this long.

``Fifty years is a long, long time.''

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/front-page/v-fullstory/story/832180.html

"What Revolution is this?" Fatigued Cubans size up 50-year fight

"What Revolution is this?" Fatigued Cubans size up 50-year fight
SANTIAGO DE CUBA
Petroleumworld.com, December 31, 2008

As the Cuban Revolution marks its 50th anniversary Thursday, Cubans old,
young, weary and proud, are wearing mixed emotions on their sleeves.

Speaking bluntly at 85 years young, Dulce Maria Arranz -- who did her
part to help Fidel Castro's revolution -- issues a report card on a
half-century: "I do not like communism, but I don't like the Americans
either. Hell, we've got a lot left ahead of us to do."

Tossed out on a lounge chair in her humble old home, Arranz remembers 50
years ago like it was yesterday, when the swirl of history's page
turning saw US-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista driven from power.

Santiago, Cuba's eastern second city in the dry shadow of the Sierra
Maestra range, watched closely back when a bold young lawyer named Fidel
Castro, who spent part of his youth here, at age 26 in 1953 attacked the
local Moncada Barracks under Batista before being driven into exile.

When Castro returned in 1956 with a motley crew of 81 men fighting for
change, Santiago was first on board to back the change Castro led.

But at the time, it was believed to be democratic and Castro had not
publicly embraced communism. Later when he did, benefiting from anti-US
Cold War alliance, some Cubans were disappointed, while others kept
following Fidel Castro's lead.

It was at Santiago's sprawling park that Fidel Castro declared victory
before an enthralled crowd on the night of January 1, 1959.

And it will be there that President Raul Castro, 77 -- who took Cuba's
helm from his ailing older brother Fidel, 82, officially last year --
will lead the anniversary ceremony Thursday.

As is the case across this country of more than 11 million, in Santiago,
a half century of Revolution -- during most of which Fidel Castro
revelled in playing David to a US Goliath -- has left many proud,
disappointed, others disgusted, some outraged and most hungry for an
easier life.

With her wheezy asthmatic's voice, Dulce Maria recalled with pride how
she hid weapons and medicine in her ceiling and toilet tank for "the
boys from the Sierra" the rebels who came down from the mountain range.

"I used to have a little store," recalls Arranz. "When Fidel came in,
they took it away from me, because they took over businesses. But I
never said a bad thing about him even though they took my own business away.

"In the end, you are going to die with nothing!," said Arranz.

Satisfied with her monthly retirement from a candy factory, Arranz takes
home 200 pesos or nine dollars a month. She says Cubans are forgetting
the repression there was under Batista and how far Cuba -- the Americas'
only communist country -- has come in education and heath care access.

But across this hilly city of a half million, where music is everywhere
on steep streets crowded with colonial-style homes, one 20ish young man
admits privately that his dream is to get the government permit he needs
to emigrate legally.

With his hands covered in car grease, Angel Ayala, 79, works on the
little gas tank he has made from a cooking oil can and rigged up to his
Russian-made Lada. He says he owes the Revolution everything, from his
car to his kids' education.

But Francisco, a bus driver who asked not to give his last name, asked
pointedly: "What Revolution is this?"

"I like the political system, but I have to do illegal things because
the 335 pesos (14 dollars a month) I earn is not enough to raise three
kids," the 46-year-old stressed.

Outside the secondary school where Fidel Castro once attended a
then-Jesuit school, one girl with red hair, 17, said privately: "these
are different times, and changes ought to be made."

"Everthing is controlled; I want freedom, and for my children in the
future not to have a hard time just putting food on the table," said
Joaquin Beltran, 21, who said he would like to take his economist's
degree and move to Italy.

Dulce Maria says that at her age, she has heard it all.

"Lots of people have hard times, but they are not starving. The
Revolution is not rich," she said beneath a flat-screen TV a nephew
living in Miami sent her.

"I am going to watch Raul (Castro) in the park on that, because Fidel is
sick. We all have to die," Arranz said.

"Look honey, there are people who love Fidel and people who don't," she
said, next to a black-and-white picture she posed for 50 years ago, hung
proudly on her crumbling wall.

Story by Isabel Sanchez from AFP
AFP 12/31/2008 08:04 GMT

http://www.petroleumworld.com/story08123105.htm

After 50 years, what's next for U.S.-Cuba ties?

After 50 years, what's next for U.S.-Cuba ties?
Havana looks for any hints of 'change' from President-elect Obama
By Andrea Mitchell
Chief foreign affairs correspondent
NBC News
updated 3:24 p.m. ET Dec. 30, 2008

WASHINGTON — As Cuba marks the 50th anniversary of its Communist
revolution this week, it is looking to Washington and wondering how
Barack Obama, the 11th U.S. president to face the Castro regime, will
change the stormy relationship with Havana.

On Jan. 1, 1959, revolutionaries led by Fidel Castro overthrew the
U.S.-backed government of President Fulgencio Batista.

Within years, President John F. Kennedy imposed the economic embargo
that has been the framework for the U.S. relationship with Cuba ever since.
Story continues below ↓advertisement | your ad here

Cuba has survived for half a century by relying on its friends — first,
the Soviet Union, now Venezuela, and by blaming the U.S. embargo for its
ills. U.S. presidents in both political parties have played into the
Cuban narrative.

Today, Havana is looking north for any hint of an overture from the
incoming Obama administration, and south toward Venezuela, whose
billions in aid during the years of high oil prices — along with easy
credit from Russia, Iran and China — have helped sustain the island's
beleaguered economy.

But how much longer can Cuba rely on its allies for financial support as
oil prices tumble?

Now a new American president's ideas for the relationship will be
tested. What happens next will depend on Obama — and on the agility and
intentions of his counterpart, thirty years his senior, Cuban President
Raul Castro.

Overtures from a new Castro leader?
While 82-year-old Fidel Castro still writes on any and all subjects for
the Communist Party daily, his 77-year-old brother Raul is clearly in
charge. Until now, Raul has not made any bold moves.

But recently, he signaled interest in a dialogue with the U.S.,
suggesting the possibility of a prisoner exchange — focusing on five
Cubans viewed by Havana as heroes, but imprisoned in the U.S. as spies.
For its part, Washington is keenly interested in any sign that Cuba will
release scores of political prisoners, writers and other dissidents
jailed by Fidel Castro during a crackdown nearly six years ago.

As with all diplomacy, progress toward an easing of tensions will
require timing, reciprocity — and mutual deniability. The Cubans are
insisting on negotiations with no preconditions. The U.S. side has long
demanded action on human rights before any easing of trade or travel
restrictions.

The stalemate has suffered, or benefited, depending on your point of
view, from not-so benign neglect: While the embargo is central to all
policy discussions in Cuba, since 9/11 and the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, Cuba has become, at most, a minor irritant to Bush
policymakers.

Cuba looking for 'change,' too
Over the past decade, I've visited Cuba frequently as a journalist — one
of the few professions still permitted under the Bush administration's
tightened restrictions to travel freely to the island.

Even during periods of extreme strain in the relationship, such as the
protests over the case of Elian Gonzalez in 1999, I've found that
average Cubans are keenly interested in learning everything they can
about the United States. Most want to clear away the tangled underbrush
of misunderstandings that have grown between the two nations over the
course of a half-century. That curiosity about the United States has
only increased as more and more Cubans gain access to the Internet
through bootlegged technology.

But to many on both sides, it seems as though every step forward —
increased tourism years ago, grain deals between Midwestern farmers and
Cuban agriculture officials, various cultural exchanges — was met with
some deliberate or unintended obstacle put forward by one or both of the
two governments.

This despite the fact that observers on the island and in the U.S.
believe that much could be shared between the neighbors if some level of
dialogue were restored. Such progress could include, but not be limited
to, potentially productive agreements on migration, drug interdiction,
health care, and hurricane relief.

After a series of devastating hurricanes and the fallout from the
deepening global recession, Cuba would obviously benefit greatly from
trade with its closest neighbor.

Cuban officials insist they want to engage, and are only awaiting a
signal from the new American president if he attends, as is expected, a
scheduled Latin American summit in Trinidad in April.

Will an Obama administration change course?
Will Obama revisit Cuban policy so early in his new administration?
Arguably, he faces many more critical challenges in Iraq, Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Iran, and now Gaza.

But for the United States, the embargo has become a double-edged sword.
At the United Nations in October, the General Assembly voted once again
for a resolution urging the United States to repeal its trade embargo
against Cuba, as it has for 17 years in a row.

The tally in favor of Havana was overwhelming, 185 countries to 3. Only
Israel and Palau joined the U.S. in supporting the 47-year-old embargo.
Obama's transition team is being told that easing the Cuba policy would
be a quick way to win friends in this hemisphere.

And the political calculus in the U.S. is no longer predictable. In
Florida, for instance, younger Cuban-Americans are less resistant than
their parents and grandparents to the idea of restored relations. Even a
slight easing of Bush administration restrictions on travel and
remittances to Cuba would be popular among many Cuban-Americans.

Nothing will be done in Havana or Washington without intense focus on
the political ramifications. Obama's party now sees a political opening
in Florida in 2010, with the announced retirement of Senator Mel
Martinez. In vying for the open seat, Democrats could even be facing a
popular former governor named Bush — Jeb Bush — who is strongly
anti-Castro, and potentially the GOP's best candidate.

Watching how their governments handle the delicate dance over future
relations will be Cuban-Americans, who have had an exaggerated influence
over U.S. policy in the past, as well as the Cubans, who have been
waiting and waiting — for 50 years.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28434139/

At crossroads of change?

Cuba: At crossroads of change?
By Michael Voss
BBC News, Havana

Cuba is facing the 50th anniversary of the revolution confronted by an
uncertain future.

Fidel Castro, who led the revolution and ruled the country for almost
half a century, has not been seen in public since undergoing major
surgery almost two-and-a-half years ago.

His brother Raul Castro has pushed through some modest but symbolic
reforms since taking over the presidency, but has also raised
expectations which have yet to be met.

The majority of Cubans were born after the revolution and declaration of
a communist state, knowing no other system or way of life. So what sort
of future are they hoping for?

Three people all under 30 in Havana gave me their views, asking that
that we did not use their real names or publish their photos.

'CLAUDIA'

Claudia, 28, is a receptionist at a hotel in Havana. Married with no
children, she lives reasonably comfortably by Cuban standards.

Her husband has a car and since Raul Castro changed the laws, they have
managed to buy a mobile phone.

"At the moment we have an impasse. We are waiting for change. We hope
that the relation between us and the United States would be better and
we hope that we have some economic change and social change."

Claudia dreams of opening a restaurant one day, and says she is prepared
to wait.

Like almost everyone in Cuba, Claudia earns the equivalent of about $25
(£17) a month in Cuban pesos. But by working in the tourist industry,
she gets some access to hard currency.

"I'm an optimist. You know it takes time to make big changes. Raul is
new in power - he has had only one year and he has to move very carefully.

One of the things that Fidel Castro tried to create with the revolution
was an egalitarian society - everyone was paid roughly the same, from
doctors to farm labourers.

"I think that this is a dream, but like all dreams it is impossible,"
she says, adding that people with better qualifications or who work
harder should earn more.

But Claudia is less concerned about the need for political reforms.

"I think that we have to continue as socialists because we have some
things that are good, like school that is free and medicine that is
free...Cuba is also a very safe country."

'ISABEL'

If Claudia is optimistic about the future, 23-year-old Isabel is not.

An English-language graduate from the University of Havana, she feels
she has no prospects of earning a decent living.

"I want to abandon the country. It's not because I don't like my country
- I enjoy being in Cuba, but I don't think I have a future here."

She is dating a young Canadian, hoping this will give her a legal way
out of the country.

Her dream is to work hard and send money home to her mother, a former
teacher. Isabel's grandparents were peasant farmers who never had access
to schools or education.

She is proud of her university degree in a country known for its
well-educated but demotivated workforce.

"We don't have the opportunity to be well paid...If we had that
motivation, everything would be different," she says.

Isabel is less worried about the political situation in Cuba.

"There is only one party, but I think it doesn't matter in the end. If
we have the possibility to change the economy of our country, I think a
lot of things can change at the same time."

But Isabel's patience is running out, fuelling her desire to migrate.

"But as soon as I can see any change in my country, I want to get back
because I love being in Cuba," she adds.

'ALBERTO'

Tens of thousands of young Cubans are still fully signed up members of
the Union of Young Communists, the party's youth wing.

One of them is 21-year-old waiter Alberto.

"We don't want capitalism here, we want socialism," he says

"I want to fight to maintain the revolution. Fidel is our star. He's our
leader. He's amazing - I think he's the best man in the world that's
ever been, like Caesar or Napoleon only better."

Like everyone here, he proudly points to Cuba's health and education
systems. But he too wants to see economic reforms.

He is hoping Raul Castro will move Cuba towards a Chinese or Vietnamese
model with the Communist Party maintaining control, but allowing free
market reforms.

"Vietnam and China are communist, they are not capitalist but they think
like capitalists...It would make good sense here too."

Alberto would also like the right to travel abroad - he has family in
Miami he would like to visit and dreams of going to Spain one day.

Even with party faithful, Cuba at 50 faces pressure for change.

Names have been changed in accordance with the requests of those
interviewed.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/americas/7805073.stm

Published: 2008/12/31 11:24:44 GMT

Amid worries, Cuba to mark 50 years of revolution

Amid worries, Cuba to mark 50 years of revolution
By Jeff Franks Jeff Franks – Wed Dec 31, 8:26 am ET

HAVANA (Reuters) – Against a backdrop of economic gloom and the frail
health of former leader Fidel Castro, Cuba will mark on Thursday the
50th anniversary of the revolution that turned the island into a
communist state and Cold War hot spot at the doorstep of the United States.

President Raul Castro will speak in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba
from the same balcony where his older brother, Fidel Castro, proclaimed
victory after dictator Fulgencio Batista fled the country in the early
morning hours of January 1, 1959.

The elder Castro, 82, in semi-seclusion since July 2006 after surgery
for an undisclosed intestinal ailment, will not attend, officials said.

Due to his absence and the economic difficulties plaguing Cuba, what had
been expected to be a major celebration of the revolution's longevity
will be a no-frills event in a tree-shaded square with room for about
only 3,000 people, the officials said.

Concerts are planned throughout the country, with the major one in
Havana where popular Cuban band Los Van Van will play at the
Anti-Imperialist Tribunal in front of the U.S. Interests Section.

The Interests Section was the embassy for the United States until it
broke off diplomatic relations in January 1961 after U.S.-owned
properties were nationalized by Fidel Castro.

Officials have said this was not a time for lavish celebration because
Cuba is struggling from the effects of three hurricanes this year that
caused $10 billion in damages, as well as the global financial crisis.

Government leaders gave a gloomy assessment of the economy last week,
telling the National Assembly the country's trade and budget deficits
had ballooned due to rising import costs and falling prices for exports.

Raul Castro called for more belt-tightening and an end to handouts he
said discouraged people from working.

'A NEW STAGE'

"The victory of the 1st of January did not mark the end of the struggle,
but the start of a new stage," he said. "There has not been a minute of
respite during the past half century."

Should he not show up, Fidel Castro's absence will raise new speculation
about his condition, to which many believe Cuba's future is closely linked.

Although he has not been seen in public for 2-1/2 years, he still has a
behind-the-scenes presence in the government and a public voice via
opinion columns he writes regularly.

He remains a world figure who made his name thumbing his nose at the
United States, just 90 miles away, and forging close ties with its Cold
War enemy, the Soviet Union.

Many Cubans believe that as long as Fidel Castro is alive, his more
pragmatic brother will not be able to reform the Cuban economy or
political system in a meaningful way.

Others doubt Raul Castro wants to make many changes and that early
reforms he implemented, such as opening computer and cell phone sales to
Cubans, were meant chiefly to gain favor with Cubans skeptical he could
fill his brother's shoes.

Cuba's revolution arrives at its 50th anniversary in a time of transition.

Fidel Castro is on the sidelines after ruling Cuba for 49 years and his
archenemy, the United States, may be on the verge of change in its Cuba
policy.

President-elect Barack Obama, who replaces President George W. Bush on
January 20, has said he wants to ease the 46-year-old U.S. trade embargo
toward Cuba, is open to talks with Cuban leaders and will consider steps
toward normalizing relations.

Both Castros have warily said talks were possible.

Changes are not just occurring at the top.

In Cuba, people, especially the young, clamor increasingly for an end to
five decades of economic hardship and see improved U.S.-Cuba relations
as a way out.

In the United States, a recent poll showed that for the first time a
majority of Cuban-Americans in Miami, center of the Cuban exile world
and anti-Castro sentiment, favor ending the embargo.

As Raul Castro told the National Assembly, "We are living in a radically
different period of history."

(Editing by Peter Cooney)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081231/ts_nm/us_cuba_revolution_anniversary_1

Cuba celebra 50 años de la revolución de Fidel Castro

CRONOLOGIA
Cuba celebra 50 años de la revolución de Fidel Castro
miércoles 31 de diciembre de 2008 13:21 CET

(Reuters) - Cuba celebrará el 1 de enero el 50 aniversario de la
revolución que llevó a Fidel Castro al poder.

A continuación, algunos de los principales hechos del último medio siglo
en Cuba.

Ene 1, 1959 - Fidel Castro baja de la Sierra Maestra al mando de un
ejército de rebeldes barbudos para derrocar al dictador Fulgencio Batista.

Ene, 1961 - Estados Unidos rompe relaciones diplomáticas con Cuba en
respuesta a la nacionalización de sus intereses en la isla. Es el
comienzo de casi medio siglo de guerra ideológica entre ambos vecinos.

Abril 16, 1961 - Castro declara que su revolución es socialista. Al día
siguiente, exiliados cubanos apoyados por la CIA intentan invadir Cuba
por Bahía Cochinos, pero son derrotados por las tropas de Castro.

Feb, 1962 - Estados Unidos impone un embargo comercial total contra
Cuba, que mantiene hasta hoy.

Oct 1962 - Crisis de los Misiles. Estados Unidos descubre la presencia
de ojivas nucleares soviéticas en Cuba. Muchos temen el inicio de la III
Guerra Mundial. La Unión Soviética retira sus misiles.

Nov 1975 - Fidel Castro envía tropas a Angola para ayudar al gobierno
izquierdista de ése país a combatir a rebeldes apoyados por Sudáfrica.
Es el inicio de 15 años de guerra por la que desfilarían unos 300.000
soldados cubanos.

Abr-Oct 1980 - Exodo de Mariel. Cuba permite a unas 125.000 personas
viajar a Estados Unidos desde el puerto de Mariel.

Dic 1991 - El colapso de la Unión Soviética sume a Cuba en una crisis
económica de la que todavía no se ha recuperado totalmente.

Ago-Sep 1994 - Más de 35.000 personas abandonan Cuba rumbo a Estados
Unidos en frágiles embarcaciones caseras.

Ene, 1998 - Juan Pablo II realiza la primera visita de un Papa a Cuba.

Jul 31, 2006 - Fidel Castro entrega temporalmente el poder a su hermano
Raúl tras una cirugía intestinal de urgencia.

Feb 24, 2008 - Raúl Castro es elegido formalmente presidente de Cuba,
cinco días después de que su hermano Fidel declinara reasumir el cargo
por su frágil estado de salud.

Dic 2008 - Raúl Castro dice estar dispuesto a reunirse con Barack Obama,
el presidente electo de Estados Unidos, que habló de suavizar algunas de
las restricciones sobre Cuba y charlar con las autoridades de la isla.

http://es.reuters.com/article/topNews/idESMAE4BU07X20081231?sp=true

Cuba Health Care in Disrepair

Cuba Health Care in Disrepair
Drafts investment plan intends to renew.

HAVANA -- The Cuban government is developing an investment plan,
proportionally its biggest ever, for the restoration of a severely
deteriorated group of the country's hospitals, officials said.

Many of the country's hospitals have suffered material deterioration due
to the trade embargo imposed by the United States on the island since
the first years of the revolution and the economic crisis that hit the
island in the 1990s, Deputy Health Minister Joaquin Garcia Salabarria
said in a press conference on Monday.

"This isn't a slogan, this is a real, objective plan for the material
and technical foundations of public health that there has been no way to
heal in a short space of time," Garcia Salabarria said.

The health official said that the investment process aimed at improving
that situation has been in recent years "the biggest the Cuban state has
developed in proportion to other sectors of the economy and services."

He said that the investment plan "could be more or less accelerated"
depending on conditions in the country, which are "unquestionably"
influenced by the international economic situation, which looks to be
"very aggressive" in the coming years.

"There is a complete strategic plan answering to the solutions required
and some investments have been approved this year," Garcia Salabarria said.

The deputy health minister said that after 50 years of revolution, Cuba
is "a world medical power," the result of its public health project,
"the basic cell" of a system that is "free" and "accessible."

The health sector accounted for 10.6 percent of the gross domestic
product (GDP) and 14.7 percent of the government's budget, Garcia
Salabarria said.

The health official said that investments planned up to the year 2015 in
the sector are aimed at a continued improvement of the population's
state of health and raising Cubans' current life expectancy from 77.9
years to somewhere in their 80s.

Subsidized prices for medicines will be maintained, and the sector will
not be included in the elimination of "gratuities" and subsidies
mentioned during the last session of the National Assembly held last
week, Garcia Salabarria said.

In his wide-ranging review, the health official said the Cuban
health-care system closes 2008 with an infant mortality rate of 4.7 for
every 1,000 live births, a staff of 488,767 doctors and technicians,
with 47,554 of them giving service in 97 other countries.

http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=324437&CategoryId=14510

Cuba cutting spending to deal with crisis

Cuba cutting spending to deal with crisis

HAVANA, Cuba, December 30, 2008 - As Cuba prepares to face the
challenges arising from the global economic crisis, President Raul
Castro has announced cuts in unnecessary government expenditure as one
of the ways the country will deal with the slowdown.

He said that while Cuba recorded growth this year, there is uncertainty
about how the world economy will perform next year and government
spending will therefore have to be adjusted.

"We must be prepared to face this serious challenge that is affecting us
in a noticeable way," President Castro said as he addressed the closing
session of Parliament over the weekend.

Among the measures which he said were aimed at lowering unnecessary
costs, was the halving of money spent on overseas trips by
representatives of state agencies and enterprises.

Mr Castro added that a number of "inappropriately free-of-charge
opportunities and excessive subsidies" would be considered for
elimination, including highly subsidised holiday programmes for
executives, outstanding workers and other sectors of the population. He
said such programmes now cost the government nearly US$60 million.

The Cuban leader insisted that free opportunities must be limited to
guaranteeing all citizens equal access to education, health care, social
security and assistance, culture and sports.

http://www.caribbean360.com/News/Business/Stories/2008/12/31/NEWS0000006750.html

Communist Cuba: 50 Years Of Failure

Communist Cuba: 50 Years Of Failure
INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
Posted 12/30/2008

Communism: New Year's Day marks 50 years of communist rule in Cuba. The
Castro oligarchy will trumpet its survival and celebrate. But the
reality, up close, is that it's the longest-running failure in the New
World.

Read More: Latin America & Caribbean

Spare us the fireworks and media-parroted claims of Fidel Castro's
dictatorship bringing universal health care and education to Cuba. The
real story is that a prosperous Cuba was turned into ruins in just five
decades.

Its inflation-adjusted gross domestic product is a mere 5% of what it
was in 1958, the year before Castro took over, according to Jorge
Salazar-Carillo of Florida International University.

"It's a major failure," Carmelo Mesa-Lago, a University of Pittsburgh
economist, told IBD. "Cuba is unable to increase food production to meet
its needs and now imports 84% of its food. Cuba produced 7 million tons
of sugar in 1952. This year, it's 1.5 million tons. This is the result
of economic policy of collectivization, killing of individual incentive,
inefficiency, constant changes of policy."

Reliable data are hard to come by. S&P refuses to rate the country for
that reason. The regime conceals its failures. But if long lines at the
Spanish embassy seeking immigration aren't enough of an indicator, the
chronology of Cuba's economy tell an important story:

1957: Cuban GDP is about $2.8 billion, unadjusted for inflation.

1959: Castro and his guerrillas take over and begin confiscating
U.S.-owned private businesses.

1960: President Eisenhower imposes trade embargo, excluding food and
medicine; Castro responds by "rapidly nationalizing most U.S.
enterprises," as he himself wrote.

1961: President Kennedy tightens the embargo. Castro blames it for plant
shutdowns, parts shortages and 7,000 transportation breakdowns a month,
leaving 25% of public buses inoperable. He then targets Cuban companies
for expropriation.

1962: Begins food rationing. Half of passenger rail cars go out of
service from lack of maintenance.

1963: President Kennedy freezes Cuban assets in the U.S.

1965: Signs deal with USSR to reschedule $500 million in debt.

1966: Signs new deal with Soviets for $91 million in trade credits.

1968: Begins petroleum rationing, says Soviets cut supplies.

1969: Begins sugar rationing in January, announces state plan to produce
10 million tons of sugar by the following year.

1970: Castro announces only 8.5 million tons of sugar produced. Blames
U.S. Diverts 85% of all Cuban trade to the USSR.

1973: Tries for the first time to tie wages to productivity.

1974: Ramps up wartime spending to send 3,000 Cuban troops to Africa. It
hits $125 per person, highest in Latin America, by 1988.

1975: President Ford announces softening of the embargo, letting foreign
subsidiaries of U.S. companies sell products in Cuba.

1979: President Carter lets Cuban-Americans visit family in Cuba. Soviet
aid totals $17 billion from 1961-79, or 30% of Cuba's GDP.

1980: Economic hardship forces Castro to permit farmers to sell surplus
to state quotas in private markets with unregulated prices. 100,000
Cubans flee the island for the U.S. via the Mariel boatlift.

1982: Cuba doubles military spending. President Reagan re-establishes
travel ban and prohibits spending money on the island.

1983: Cuba signs accord in Paris to refinance its foreign debt.

1984: "Armed Forces of Latin America" yearbook says: "Cuba is probably
the world's most completely militarized country."

1985: Cuba signs new debt restructuring, blaming Mexico's crisis for its
debacle. Permits selling of private housing for the first time. Total
aid from USSR since 1961 hits $40 billion.

1986: Castro defaults on $10.9 billion in Paris Club debt. Blames sugar
prices. Abolishes coffee breaks, cuts subsidies. Soviets give $3 billion
more in credit and aid. Castro bans farmers markets.

1987: Stops paying entirely on $10.9 billion Paris Club debts.

1988: Forbids release of inflation data, making it impossible for
researchers to assess Cuban economic performance.

1990: By official statistics, GDP per capita declines 10.3%.

1991: Sugar crop falls to 7 million tons. Politburo purged. USSR ends $5
billion in subsidies. "Special Period" of austerity begins.

1992: Horse-drawn carts replace cars, oxen replace Soviet tractors. Time
magazine reports tin cans are recycled into drinking cups and banana
peels into Cuban sandals.

1993: World Bank says GDP contracts 15.1% per capita, as industrial
output plunges 40% per person.

1994: Some private-sector activity permitted. GDP per capita shows no
growth, but Castro hails "recovery." Agricultural output down 54% from
1989, with sugar at 4 million tons. Castro blames bad finances, and
"errors and inefficiency." Food consumption, according to USDA, falls
36%. Some 32,000 Cubans flee for Florida.

1995: Havana admits GDP fell 35% from 1989 to 1993. Vice President
Carlos Lage claims GDP grew 2.5%, as inflation hits 19%.

1996: Castro hikes private business taxes. President Clinton tightens
embargo. Castro claims GDP rose to 7% in year.

1997: GDP reported up 2.5%, falling short of 5% projection. Failed sugar
harvest, bad weather, crop pests, foreign debts blamed.

1998: GDP growth claimed at 1.2% with no inflation. U.S. embargo, global
financial crisis, low commodity prices, too much rainfall, Hurricane
Georges and severe drought blamed. Castro urges other debtor nations to
form a cartel.

1999: GDP claimed at 6.2%. Subsidies from Venezuela begin. Castro blames
U.S. dollar for woes and urges use of the euro.

2000: Cuban court rules U.S. owes Cuba $121 billion for embargo.

2001: 3.6% GDP growth, output remains below 1989. Blames loss of
subsidies, second-worst sugar harvest ever at 3.5 million tons.

2002: Freezes dollar sales to preserve foreign reserves. Shuts down 118
factories due to power shortages. Buys $125 million in U.S. food.
Defaults on $750 million in Japanese debts.

2003: Earns more tight sanctions from President Bush and European Union
over dissident roundups. GDP rises just 1.8%.

2004: Castro declares GDP a capitalist instrument, adjusts calculations,
declares GDP growing at 5%.

2005: Foreign firms asked to leave and market liberalization scrapped.
Imports hit three-times the level of exports. Hurricanes blamed for
falling farm output. Sugar figures not released. Castro calls economic
crisis an "enemy fabrication." Claims GDP up 11%.

2006: Castro claims 12.5% economic growth, "despite the crippling
effects of the U.S. embargo," Luxner News notes.

2007: 7.5% GDP growth claimed; adverse weather said to have affected
construction and agriculture.

2008: 4.3% GDP growth claimed, far short of 8% forecast. "One of the
most difficult years since the collapse of the Soviet Union," economy
minister says. Hurricanes and fuel prices blamed.

That, in sum, is Cuba after 50 years. But lest you get the wrong idea,
Cuba hasn't failed at everything: "Given their goal — to destroy
capitalism and entrench themselves — they're a success," said Humberto
Fontova, an expert on Castro's regime.

http://www.investors.com/editorial/editorialcontent.asp?secid=1501&status=article&id=315532982181405

Press freedom is a human right

Press freedom is a human right
By Joel Simon/Executive Director

I attended a potluck reception for my daughter's first-grade class last
week, and amid the banter about the economic meltdown and arranging play
dates I spent a lot of time answering the inevitable questions about
what I do for a living.

I'm used to it. Defending the rights of journalists around the world is
not a normal job description.

But I'm always happy to talk about CPJ and the important work that
journalists are doing in gathering the news in so many repressive
countries. I was struck, however, when a very well informed parent asked
me if press freedom was a human right.

It reminded me that 60 years after the ratification of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (the anniversary is Wednesday), and 27 years
since CPJ was founded, we have a great deal of work to do to raise
awareness that the work of the media is protected under international law.

Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states,
"Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right
includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek,
receive and impart information and ideas through any media and
regardless of frontiers."

It is this language that gives CPJ standing to raise our voice on behalf
of our colleagues when they are jailed, attacked, or killed because of
their work.

The language is also prescient. A few days ago CPJ released its annual
imprisoned list, showing for the first time that nearly half of
journalists jailed around the world worked online. We should be thankful
that the authors of Article 19 used language anticipating the rise of
new forms of communication and a global media.

Article 19 has special meaning for me because I believe that freedom of
expression is the underpinning of all other political rights.
Totalitarian societies are structured to control information because
repressive leaders know their greatest enemy is an informed public.

Today, there are 125 journalists in jail around the world in places like
China, Cuba, Eritrea, Burma, and Uzbekistan. This is a reminder that we
have a long way to go to turn the stirring words of Article 19 into real
protection for the world's journalists.

Yes, press freedom is a fundamental human right. It's our job at CPJ to
make sure the world knows it.

http://cpj.org/blog/2008/12/press-freedom-is-a-human-right.php

Cuba's Long Black Spring

Cuba's Long Black Spring
By Carlos Lauria, Monica Campbell, and María Salazar

Five years after the Castro government cracked down on the independent
press, more than 20 journalists remain behind bars for the crime of free
expression.

In her kitchen overlooking Havana's crumbling skyline, Julia Núñez
Pacheco recalls the day five years ago when plainclothes state security
agents, pistols on hips, stormed into her home. They accused Adolfo
Fernández Saínz, her husband of three decades and an independent
journalist with the small news agency Patria, of committing acts aimed
at "subverting the internal order of the nation." Over the course of
eight long hours, agents ransacked the apartment, confiscating items
considered proof of Fernández Saínz's crimes: a typewriter, stacks of
the Communist Party daily Granma with Fidel Castro's remarks underlined,
and outlawed books such as George Orwell's Animal Farm and 1984. As
Fernández Saínz was hauled away, Núñez Pacheco remembers one of the
agents turning to her and saying, "You know, we've been told you are
decent, quiet people. No fighting, no yelling. It's a shame you've
chosen this path."

Today, the 60-year-old Núñez Pacheco lives alone in this same Central
Havana apartment. A blown-up photograph of her husband and
autobiographies of Nelson Mandela and Malcolm X rest on a bookshelf.
Núñez Pacheco survives on family remittances from overseas, occasional
donations from international human rights groups, and her
government-issued ration card, which allots for basic provisions. Like
most prisoners' relatives, she is blacklisted and unable to work in any
official capacity, as the state is Cuba's sole employer. She sees her
husband infrequently because of the prison's distance from her home and
rules that allow family visits just once every two months. Fernández
Saínz, who is serving a 15-year sentence, is being held in central Ciego
de Ávila province, more than 400 miles (650 kilometers) from Havana.

During a three-day span in March 2003, as the world focused on the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the Cuban government ordered the abrupt
arrest of 75 dissidents--29 of them independent journalists. All of the
reporters and editors were convicted in one-day trials and handed
sentences that could leave some in prison for the rest of their lives.
They were accused of acting against the "integrity and sovereignty of
the state" or of collaborating with foreign media for the purpose of
"destabilizing the country." Under Cuban law, that meant any journalist
who published abroad, particularly in the United States, had no defense.

Five years later, 20 of these journalists remain behind bars, along with
two others jailed since the crackdown. Like Fernández Saínz, most are
being held in prisons hundreds of miles from their homes under inhumane
conditions that have taken a toll on their health, according to an
investigation by the Committee to Protect Journalists. At home, their
families, unable to work, scrape for basic necessities while being
regularly watched and often harassed by state authorities, CPJ found.

Cuba has dismissed international criticism, particularly from the United
States, as the work of political adversaries out to weaken its
government. But the imprisonment of these journalists in reprisal for
their independent reporting violates the most basic norms of
international law, including Article 19 of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, which guarantees everyone the right to
"seek, receive, and impart information and ideas of all kinds,
regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in the
form of art, or through any other media of his choice." Cuba signed the
1966 accord on February 28 of this year, although it said it would place
unspecified interpretations and reservations on certain provisions.

These unjust imprisonments have also drawn protests from writers and
intellectuals worldwide, including several who are philosophical allies
of the Communist regime. "As someone who has always celebrated the
achievements of the Cuban Revolution, and particularly its health care
and educational systems, I am saddened and outraged each time that
freedom of expression is suppressed in Cuba," the Chilean novelist,
playwright, essayist, and human rights activist Ariel Dorfman told CPJ.
As much as Dorfman denounces U.S. policies toward Cuba--such as its
longstanding embargo, or "blockade," as it is called in some political
corners--he says the Cuban government is unjustified in continuing to
hold these journalists.

"Even while condemning the blockade against Cuba and the constant
attempts to overthrow its government, I stand firmly on the side of all
Cuban journalists, who have every right to inform and criticize without
fear of persecution," Dorfman said. "Liberty is indivisible."

Over the past five years, Cuba has freed a small number of journalists
and dissidents in exchange for international political concessions.
Spain, which has sought to reestablish influence with Cuba, has taken
the lead in negotiations that have led to the release of some prisoners.
Spain deserves credit for helping win the release of these journalists
and dissidents, but the Cuban government is obliged by international
human rights standards to release all of those who are unjustly jailed.
Despite the periodic releases, Cuba remains the world's second-leading
jailer of journalists, behind only China.
Fidel Castro, who stepped down as president in February after 49 years
in power, allowed his nation to pay a significant international price
for these unjust imprisonments--drawing rebukes from allies as well as
foes, and intensifying his country's isolation in the world. His
successor, brother Raúl Castro, could restore bridges to the
international community by releasing all of these prisoners. By doing
so, immediately and without condition, he could help usher in a new era
for Cuba's international relations.

Known in Cuba as the "Black Spring," the crackdown showed that Castro's
government was determined to crush grassroots dissent and tolerate
prolonged international protest. Journalists arrested in the crackdown
were key members of a movement that began in the mid-1990s, when Raúl
Rivero created the independent news agency Cuba Press and Rafael Solano
founded the counterpart Havana Press. The aim was to test freedom of
speech by filing to overseas outlets critical dispatches and analyses
about life on the tightly controlled island. The birth of these news
agencies coincided with the growth of the Internet, which enabled the
spread of their coverage.

Composed of opposition activists with a political bent and others who
took a more straightforward journalistic approach, the nascent
independent press contributed to foreign outlets such as CubaNet, a
U.S.-based online outlet, and Spanish-language publications and Internet
sites in Europe, such as the Spanish magazine Encuentro de la Cultura
Cubana. Journalists provided radio reports to U.S. government-funded
Radio Martí, which can be heard in Cuba, and to other Florida-based
stations. The media outlets paid small fees per story. The stories drew
not-so-small notice. Even before March 2003, the journalists were
subjected to harassment and sporadic short-term imprisonments.

"International attention on these journalists was reaching a fever
pitch," said Andy Gomez, senior fellow at the University of Miami's
Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies. Cuban officials, he
said, feared they might lose their grip over the population by letting
people vent their frustrations. "The government decided enough was enough."

The crackdown was swift. Detentions began on March 18, 2003, and
continued for another two days. Police raided the homes of political
dissidents and journalists and accused them of being
"counterrevolutionaries" or "mercenaries" at the service of the United
States. During the hours-long raids, state security agents confiscated
tape recorders, cameras, typewriters, computers, and fax machines, as
well as books, newspapers, notepads, and research materials. The
journalists were handcuffed, hustled from their houses, and taken to the
headquarters of the State Security Department (known by its Spanish
acronym, DSE), home of Cuba's political police.

At the DSE, they were tossed into small cells with prisoners charged
with violent crimes. Their families waited outside for days, trying to
assess the situation. One-day trials against them were held behind
closed doors on April 3 and 4. In many cases, the families later said,
the journalists were unable to meet with their lawyers prior to the
hearings, and their defense was given only hours to prepare. On April 7,
local courts across Cuba announced their verdicts: The 29 journalists
had been handed sentences ranging from 14 to 27 years in prison.

Most have been transferred from prison to prison several times since
then, often as punishment for protesting the conditions of their
incarceration, CPJ research shows. Many are held far from their
families. Given Cuba's deteriorating transportation system and high
travel costs, such distances are extreme burdens. Families, who are
allowed short visits every four to eight weeks, bring the journalists
nutritious meals, hygiene supplies, medicine, and clean clothes--staples
not always provided by the prisons.

Cuban Minister of Foreign Relations Felipe Pérez Roque and Dagoberto
Rodríguez Barrera, head of the Cuban Interests Section in Washington,
did not respond to letters, e-mails, and faxes sent by CPJ seeking
comment for this report. The office of President Raúl Castro did not
respond to faxes seeking comment.

All of the journalists are suffering from medical problems that have
emerged or worsened during their five-year incarcerations, according to
CPJ interviews with family members and friends. It is a litany of
individual misery and governmental inhumanity: José Luis García Paneque,
42, has suffered malnutrition, chronic pneumonia, and a kidney tumor.
José Ubaldo Izquierdo Hernández, 42, suffers from emphysema, a hernia,
and circulatory problems. Ricardo González Alfonso, 58, has
hypertension, arthritis, severe allergies, and a number of digestive and
circulatory diseases. Omar Ruiz Hernández, 60, who suffers from high
blood pressure and circulatory problems, recently learned that one of
his retinas has become detached. In these and other cases, CPJ research
shows, the government has failed to provide adequate medical care.

Prison conditions are appalling, according to these interviews, which
have been conducted by CPJ over several years and documented in detail
in annual editions of its book on international press conditions,
Attacks on the Press. Prison authorities not only harass the journalists
but also encourage other inmates to bully and assault the political
prisoners. The journalists are warehoused in massive barracks or
cubbyholed in undersized cells that lack ventilation. Drinking water is
contaminated with fecal matter, the food with worms. Protests against
these unsanitary conditions often land the journalists in isolation cells.

Their families struggle as well. Ileana Marrero Joa, 39, lives in a
rundown Havana suburb with her three children. Her husband, independent
journalist Omar Rodríguez Saludes, was imprisoned in 2003. Rodríguez
Saludes was considered one of Cuba's most dogged street journalists,
riding a bicycle throughout the city to catch press conferences and call
in stories to Nueva Prensa Cubana, a small Miami-based agency. Today,
Marrero Joa and her children visit the 42-year-old Rodríguez Saludes for
two hours once every two months, time spent eating a home-cooked meal
and updating Rodríguez on efforts to win release of the political prisoners.

Rodríguez Saludes' 19-year-old son, Osmany, is impressed by his father's
strength. "He says he's staying strong for us, so that when he's let out
he won't be a broken man," the younger Rodríguez told CPJ. But once
separated from his father, the lanky teen returns to his own bleak
reality. He, too, is blacklisted. Last November, after months of working
off the books hauling bread on and off trucks, he asked his boss if he
could become an official employee. After being given a series of evasive
answers, the younger Rodríguez was told his "criminal past" was a
problem. "Having a dad in prison is my crime," the son says, leafing
through a book of his father's street photography. "I might as well be
in there with him. It's four walls for all of us."

With the aftermath of the 2003 arrests consuming their lives, families
of the imprisoned dissidents have created a tight bond. Two weeks after
the crackdown, the Damas de Blanco (Ladies in White) group was formed,
gathering on Sundays at Havana's Santa Rita de Casia Catholic Church.
After Mass, they walk 10 blocks to a nearby park. In the spirit of
Argentina's Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, who call attention to
relatives who disappeared during that country's military dictatorship,
the Cuban group dons white, with each woman carrying a pink gladiolus
flower and wearing a button with her loved one's picture that says
"prisoner of conscience." They demand the prisoners' release and, at
least, an improvement in conditions.

Pro-Castro groups attempt to thwart the Ladies in White. Hecklers call
the women counterrevolutionaries on the U.S. dole. Photographs taken by
a local journalist show a man striking Laura Pollán Toledo, a group
leader and wife of jailed journalist Héctor Maseda Gutiérrez, in the
back of the head during a protest. "As long as we're out in public
demanding change, freedom, and human rights, we can expect acts of
aggression," says Pollán Toledo, who lost her job as a high school
Spanish teacher after the crackdown.

On a recent afternoon at her home in Central Havana, while a friend put
her long blond hair in curlers (she would visit her husband the next
day), Pollán Toledo pointed to a corner in her living room where she
said she recently found a hidden microphone. Pollán Toledo's home, a
popular gathering place for dissidents and relatives of jailed
dissidents, is under constant watch. Pollán Toledo realizes that
international recognition can provide a layer of security, but she adds
that "immunity from punishment by the Cuban government is not guaranteed."


Yet, for the most part, a small corps of independent journalists
continues to operate in Cuba in much the same manner as it did in 2003.
There are close to 100 independent reporters working in Cuba today, most
of them in Havana, although some provincial reporters are also active.
Independent journalists told CPJ they do most of their reporting in the
evenings, when they can be more inconspicuous. Though owning a computer
in Cuba is unlawful without government permission, some have antiquated
laptops; others use even older typewriters. Many just use a pad and a
pencil. They usually file their stories by public phones during
prearranged conversations with foreign media outlets. Others file by
fax, and in some rare cases, through e-mail. Although the vast majority
of their work goes to foreign Web sites or publications, Havana-based
reporters occasionally use the computer facilities of foreign embassies
to print an assortment of news pieces.

"On top of being harassed and not being part of the official press corps
in Cuba, independent journalists in Cuba go without some of the most
basic reporting tools, from having a cell phone or even a regular phone
to steady Internet access," says Hugo Landa, director of CubaNet. "I
think that's why a lot of independent journalists publish opinion pieces
and short, firsthand accounts of things they witness on the ground, more
than any type of investigative piece. What they are able to publish
reflects the realities they run up against. I always feel that they are
doing an admirable job, considering the difficult circumstances under
which they work."

They cover what Cuba's official press largely ignores. The Cuban
constitution allows the Communist Party to control the news and filter
it through its propaganda-minded Department of Revolutionary
Orientation. Press rights are granted only "in accordance with the goals
of the socialist society."

The independent press coverage reflects basic ideas and information
protected under international agreements, including the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights. CPJ reviewed 40 articles written from January to March
2003 by journalists who were imprisoned during the crackdown, and
several dozen articles written by independent journalists, including
former political prisoners, between 2006 and 2007. All were published on
foreign news Web sites and media outlets in the United States and Spain.

Coverage largely focused on social issues, including food shortages,
empty pharmacy shelves, housing problems, unemployment, and poorly
equipped schools. Reporters also covered Cuba's dissident community,
from the opening of independent home libraries and trade union movements
to the harassment of human rights activists. They wrote about police
harassment and human rights violations, ranging from the arrest of
street vendors to violence against political prisoners. Criticism of the
government and its leaders--mainly Fidel Castro--was common but not
inflammatory. For example, in a January 2003 story on lengthy lines at a
train station, now-imprisoned reporter José Ubaldo Izquierdo Hernández
wrote: "How long will we have to wait to wake up from this nightmare
that has lasted now 44 years?"


Five years after the crackdown, despite international pressure, Cuba has
freed only nine imprisoned journalists. Among the released: Jorge
Olivera Castillo, a 46-year-old who served his country as a soldier in
Angola and as an editor at the state-run television station Instituto
Cubano de Radio y Televisión.

In December 2004, Olivera Castillo was freed from a Guantánamo prison on
medical parole after suffering from colon problems. Yet his freedom is
conditional. He and his family have U.S.-issued visas, but Cuba denies
them permission to exit. In fact, he cannot leave Havana and is barred
from attending any public gatherings. His phone is tapped, his mail
searched, and, without warning, state security agents pay him visits.
They ask about his work and his family, and offer subtle reminders that
his freedom is tenuous.

Despite these risks, Olivera Castillo continues to write. Sitting at his
kitchen table in his cramped apartment in Old Havana, he taps away at a
donated Dell laptop. Along with short stories, he writes political
analysis for CubaNet. "There was a time when I believed in the
revolution, but I then realized that as hard as I worked, I never had
savings. I soon realized that a better life for myself and my family was
not possible," said Olivera Castillo, who once tried to leave Cuba on a
makeshift raft bound for Florida. He eventually began working with
independent news agencies such as Havana Press.

Olivera Castillo's professional experience is rare among the independent
press. Many are teachers, physicians, office workers, and engineers
turned writers. Others hail from the dissident movement, either
activists in independent unions or members of opposition political parties.

Contributing to mainstream foreign news outlets such as The Miami Herald
and Spain's El País are former high-ranking government officials. One of
them, economist Oscar Manuel Espinosa Chepe, was part of an elite group
of advisors to Fidel Castro in the 1960s and helped craft Cuba's
economic cooperation with Eastern Europe. Influenced by glasnost and
perestroika in the 1980s, Espinosa Chepe began touting more liberal
economic polices, such as loosening limits on land or business
ownership. Steadily demoted as Castro rejected such reforms, he was
eventually assigned work as a clerk at a small bank near his home.

Espinosa Chepe's wife, Miriam Leiva, remained a member of the Communist
Party and held a high-level post in the Ministry of Foreign Relations.
When Espinosa Chepe decided to quit his clerking job and write for
foreign outlets, Leiva faced pressure at work to either denounce him as
a counterrevolutionary or lose her job. "They thought they were giving
me a choice between remaining a somebody or becoming a nobody," said
Leiva, 60. Refusing to cooperate, Leiva was fired and the couple began
contributing full-time to foreign media from their tiny Havana
apartment. Leiva wrote about social ills such as prostitution and the
disparities between consumer goods available to tourists and those for
citizens. Espinosa Chepe produced sharp economic analyses that were
circulated underground, and he hosted a weekly Radio Martí show called
"Charlando con Chepe" (Chatting with Chepe). He spoke about increasing
food imports, rising inflation, and falling investment. "I didn't get a
cent from Radio Martí," says Espinosa Chepe, 67. "My main concern was
getting the word out. We'd always find a way to get by."

That has been extraordinarily difficult at times. Espinosa Chepe was
swept up in the 2003 crackdown and languished in prison for more than a
year. During his imprisonment, Leiva helped organize relatives of
imprisoned journalists to protest, and she published commentaries in
U.S. and European newspapers. By the time Espinosa Chepe was freed on
medical parole in November 2004, he had lost more than 20 pounds and was
suffering from gastrointestinal bleeding, liver problems, and high blood
pressure.

Today, Leiva and Espinosa Chepe continue to work from a tiny apartment
stuffed with books, many banned by the government. When asked if they
fear another crackdown, Leiva said, "I refuse to be quiet and lose my
dignity." Espinosa Chepe, relaxing in a rocking chair after a
home-cooked meal, nods in agreement. "We go on normally with our
abnormal lives," he says.

Remarkably, several imprisoned reporters have continued working behind
bars. In prison, Olivera Castillo managed to pass outsiders 37 of his
poems, which were eventually published in Spain. Journalists such as
Maseda Gutiérrez, González Alfonso, and Normando Hernández González have
smuggled out entire memoirs, a few sheets of paper at a time. Others
have reported on human rights violations in Cuban prisons. In a recent
essay published on CubaNet, for instance, Fernández Saínz denounced the
treatment of an imprisoned human rights activist.

Since 2003, Cuba has used imprisoned journalists and dissidents as
political leverage, sporadically releasing a few in exchange for
international concessions. "Cuba has effectively used political
prisoners as an element of political negotiation, as bargaining chips,"
says Elizardo Sánchez Santa Cruz, president of the Cuban Commission for
Human Rights and National Reconciliation, a domestic human rights group
that operates despite being officially banned by the government.

Since taking office in April 2004, the left-leaning government of
Spanish President José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero has acted as a mediator
between the European Union and the Castro government. Relations between
Brussels and Havana--already strained by the EU's 1996 Common Position
on Cuba, which demanded improvement in human rights and political
liberties in the island--were further damaged after the 2003 crackdown
and ensuing EU diplomatic sanctions.

Spain's strategy of engagement with the Cuban government, which differs
from U.S. policies aimed at isolating Cuba through economic sanctions
and travel restrictions, has gained support from EU members such as
Britain while meeting opposition from northern and eastern members led
by the Czech Republic. Nonetheless, in January 2005, the European
Parliament voted to lift the 2003 diplomatic sanctions after the Cuban
government transferred more than a dozen ailing dissidents from jail
cells to prison hospitals and granted medical paroles to a number of
others, including the writers Rivero and Manuel Vázquez Portal.

This February--just months after Spain announced the resumption of some
cooperation programs between the two countries--Cuba freed four more
prisoners, including independent journalists José Gabriel Ramón Castillo
and Alejandro González Raga. Prominent dissident Oswaldo Payá, leader of
the Christian Liberation Movement, says the dialogue between the two
governments has been important, "but it can also be used as a smoke
screen to hide the fact that there has been no real progress on human
rights."

These are not ordinary times in Cuba, however, as Payá and others point
out. The ailing 81-year-old Fidel Castro, who handed over day-to-day
power to brother Raúl in July 2006, announced on February 19 that he was
officially resigning as president, ending nearly a half century of rule.
The National Assembly named Raúl Castro, 76, as president five days later.

With Raúl Castro in charge, there have been hints at economic,
agricultural, and administrative reforms. His government's decision to
sign the four-decade-old International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, while a potentially encouraging move, was clouded by the vague
caveats it immediately placed on the document.
"Signing this agreement is a positive thing," Payá says, "but in order
for the decision to be coherent, the government must release the
political prisoners who are jailed for peacefully practicing and
promoting these rights."

Some change is coming from the ground up, as a new generation of
tech-savvy bloggers emerges. On a recent afternoon, Yoani Sánchez, a
slim 32-year-old wearing baggy surfer shorts and a T-shirt, sat at a
small, wooden table in her living room and sipped a strong Cuban
espresso. Here is where she writes entries for her blog Generación Y,
created last April. The blog chronicles her everyday observations of
Cuba, from the abundance of José Martí statues to bored youth and the
workings of Cuba's black market. In a January 8 entry, Sánchez writes
how she cannot "conceive a day without immersing myself in the black
market in order to buy eggs, cooking oil or tomato paste."

She heads to one of Havana's Internet cafés once a week, a practice that
is extremely expensive. (One hour at an Internet café in Havana
typically costs 160 pesos [US$6], about one-third an average monthly
salary on the island.) But Sánchez works fast, quickly uploading her
files from a flash memory drive and downloading readers' comments and
e-mail. For cash, Sánchez approaches tourists and offers to give them
walking tours of the city. "My friends think I'm taking a huge risk with
my blog," says Sánchez, who posts her real name and a photo of herself
on her blog. "But I think it's my way of pushing back against the
system, if only a little bit."

Other newcomers include Sin EVAsion, a blog run by the pseudonymous Eva
González, who describes herself as part of the "generation that came of
age in 1980," when Fidel Castro gave permission to any person who wanted
to leave Cuba to do so from the port of Mariel, which he declared
"open." As a result, some 125,000 Cuban refugees left the island during
what became known as the Mariel boat lift. It's a generation, she says,
that struggles "between disillusion and hope." Another new blog is
Retazos, run by the colorfully pen-named El Guajiro Azul, who lives in
Cuba "while he has no other option." Blog entries range from essays on
Cuban censorship to the manual work that elderly Cubans turn to in order
to supplement their meager pensions.

Most reader comments thank the bloggers for publishing critical views.
Others take the bloggers to task. The popularity of Sánchez's blog--she
said thousands have visited--has generated a wave of pro-regime comments
from readers who have added pro-government links and slogans such as
"Viva Cuba! Viva Fidel!" It is, in its own limited way, a forum for
opposing views.

Five years after the crackdown, the independent press movement is far
from being deterred. On a recent weekday morning, independent reporter
Olivera Castillo makes his way along one of Havana's main avenues to a
pay phone, where he'll call a contact for a story he's reporting. On the
sidewalks, elderly men play dominoes as a line of people snakes down the
block awaiting a crowded bus. Olivera Castillo keeps walking. He has
work to do, although he knows that what he writes today could be the
tipping point for his arrest and return to prison. But he pays no mind.
"I refuse," he says, "to live in fear for expressing my ideas."

Carlos Lauría is CPJ's senior program coordinator for the Americas.
María Salazar is the program's research associate. Monica Campbell is a
freelance journalist based in Mexico City.


CPJ's Recommendations

CPJ calls on the government of President Raúl Castro to implement the
following recommendations:

* Immediately and unconditionally release all imprisoned journalists.
* Vacate the convictions of the nine journalists who were released
on medical parole since the 2003 crackdown.
* Ensure the proper care of all journalists in government custody.
We hold the government responsible for the health and welfare of those
incarcerated.
* Fully meet its commitments under the recently signed
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights by allowing
journalists to work freely and without fear of reprisal.

http://cpj.org/reports/2008/03/cuba-press-crackdown.php

CPJ petitioners urge Castro to free journalists

CPJ petitioners urge Castro to free journalists
December 31, 2008

Raúl Castro Ruz
President of the Republic of Cuba
C/o Cuban Mission to the United Nations
315 Lexington Ave.
New York, NY 10016

Via facsimile: (212) 779-1697

Dear President Castro,

The Committee to Protect Journalists is writing to you on the eve of the
50th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution to renew its call for the
immediate and unconditional release of all journalists jailed in your
country. With 21 reporters and editors unjustly incarcerated, Cuba is
one of the leading jailers of journalists in the world, second only to
China.

On Monday, CPJ sent more than 500 appeals to the Cuban government asking
for the release of Héctor Maseda Gutiérrez, recipient of CPJ's 2008
International Press Freedom Award, and the 20 other journalists who are
behind bars in Cuba. Maseda Gutíerrez, 65, is the oldest imprisoned
Cuban journalist. Incarcerated during the government's March 2003
crackdown on political dissidents and the independent press, he was
given a 20-year prison sentence.

These petitions were sent to the Cuban Mission to the United Nations in
New York City. They were signed by prominent U.S. and international
journalists who gathered for CPJ's International Press Freedom Awards
ceremony. CNN Chief International Correspondent Christiane Amanpour, a
CPJ board member, announced the award to Maseda Gutíerrez.

Maseda Gutiérrez was detained along with 28 other independent
journalists while the world's attention was focused on the U.S. invasion
of Iraq. These reporters and editors were tried summarily behind closed
doors and sentenced to terms ranging from 14 to 27 years in prison.
Based on our review of trial documents, we believe that the journalists
were prosecuted for engaging in professional activities protected by
international law. Nine have since been released on medical parole.

n 2007, one more journalist was jailed. Freelance reporter Oscar Sánchez
Madan, 46, was convicted of "social dangerousness," a vague pre-emptory
charge contained in Article 72 of the penal code, following a one-day
trial, and was given the maximum sentence of four years in prison.

The imprisoned journalists are held in inhumane conditions, and many
suffer deteriorating health, according to CPJ research. At home, their
families, unable to work, scrape for basic necessities while being
regularly watched and often harassed by state authorities, CPJ found in
"Cuba's Long Black Spring," a special report released in March.

CPJ research shows that over the past five years, the Cuban government
has used jailed journalists and other dissidents as political leverage,
sporadically releasing a few in exchange for international concessions.
Last February--just months after Spain announced the resumption of some
cooperative programs with Cuba--your country freed four more prisoners,
including independent journalists José Gabriel Ramón Castillo and
Alejandro González Raga. On December 18, you offered to exchange jailed
political dissidents for five Cuban citizens imprisoned in the United
States on espionage charges, describing it as a gesture toward dialogue
with the incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama,
according to reports in the international press.


While we welcome the release of any imprisoned journalist, we are
distressed that they would be used as bargaining chips. We call for the
immediate and unconditional release of all 21 jailed journalists. The
imprisonment of journalists in reprisal for their independent reporting
violates international law, including Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, signed by your government this year, which provides
"the right to freedom of expression."

Since you became president, there have been significant economic,
agricultural, and administrative reforms in Cuba. However, there has
been no real progress on press freedom issues. On the eve of this
historic date for your country, we urge you to free these jailed
journalists and grant freedom of expression and information, including
Internet access, to all citizens as a sign that your government is
willing to uphold international human rights standards.

Sincerely,

Joel Simon
Executive Director

http://cpj.org/2008/12/cpj-petitioners-urge-castro-to-free-journalists.php

Cuba's black market housing boom

Cuba's black market housing boom
By Linda Pressly
BBC Radio 4's Crossing Continents

Maria Julia is desperate. She lives in a Havana flat that belongs to her
husband's grandparents.

For the last seven years she and her husband have shared a bedroom with
their two children.

Maria Julia - not her real name - fears her relationship with her
husband will not withstand the pressures of their living arrangements
for much longer.

She says she has only one chance of securing a separate flat in Havana
for her family and saving her relationship - and it is drastic.

"The only option I have is to divorce my husband, and to marry a man who
has legal title to a flat. I will pay him. Then in two years, he will
sign over the property to me, we will get divorced and I will marry my
husband again."

This complicated transaction will cost Maria Julia $10,000 (£6,800). It
is a fortune in Cuba, but the minimum going rate. Her sister has sent
her the money from the US, and Maria Julia has it hidden - in cash -
somewhere in Havana.

Maria Julia's plan to buy a flat is illegal, which is why we cannot
identify her. In Cuba, only the state has the right to sell property.
Private buyers - or sellers - may end up having their home confiscated
altogether by the state if they are caught.

Swap shop

There was already a shortfall of more than half a million homes before
three hurricanes wrought widespread destruction in 2008.

Overall, the housing stock is in a dilapidated state.

The precariousness of the Cuban economy, which the government says is
partly due to the impact of the US trade embargo, means the new building
programme is not keeping up with demand. So the black market is thriving.

"It's the biggest, really the biggest in Cuba," says Juan Triana, an
economist at the Centre for the Study of the Cuban Economy.

Mr Triana is unwilling to guess at what the housing black market is
worth in cash terms, but he is troubled.

"Everybody's losing. And for me, as an economist, it's frustrating.
Today if you want to buy your home, you have to use the black market."

Although Cubans are not allowed to buy and sell properties privately,
they are permitted to swap. And on a Saturday morning, hundreds of
people gather on the Paseo del Prado in central Havana in the hope of
finding someone they can exchange homes with.

Officially no money should change hands. Yet in practice, swapping a
smaller property for something larger will mean parting with several
thousand dollars.

But Maria Julia has no property to swap - her husband's grandparents
hold the legal title to the flat she lives in. So a bogus marriage is
the only way she can see of changing her circumstances.

Maria Julia has used an illicit middleman, known as a corredor -
literally, a runner - to find her new home. She is busy working and has
no time to do it herself. If the deal goes through, she will pay him $500.

Property chain

The transaction will take time, because the man she will buy from in
Havana is still securing his own new property.

"He has a girlfriend in Santiago de Cuba," she says. "They have seen
somewhere in Santiago they want to buy. And his girlfriend is going to
have to marry a very old man in his 80s to get that property.

"They will have to pay the old man too, with the money that I am going
to give them. It is a really long chain."

Cuba is marking the 50th anniversary of its revolution. One of the most
popular moves of Fidel Castro in his early years of government was
housing reform.

Many tenants got legal title to their homes and rents were capped.

Multiple property ownership was prohibited: Cubans can still only
legally own one home in the town where they live and another in the
countryside.

But 50 years on from those heady, optimistic beginnings, housing is
close to the top of the list of complaints among Cubans.

Juan Marcos Mendez, the vice president of the government's National
Housing Institute, does not deny there are huge challenges. But he
maintains that the answer does not lie in privatising housing.

"Housing is social property. We don't believe it's right for people to
make a profit from it. Of course, some people still haven't understood
the reasons why we have these rules and they try to get ahead illegally.

"But it's only possible to improve the situation by continuing our
building programme - although the United States blockade has a serious
impact on that. We may have problems in Cuba but we don't have people
sleeping under bridges."

And that is true. But the impact of the housing shortage is distorting
family life for many people.

Now Maria Julia is worried that the deal she has set in motion will
further sour her relationship with her husband.

"It's one thing to accept the fact you have to make a bogus marriage as
an idea, but quite another to actually do it.

"I have a worry - maybe it's a premonition - that I'll solve the housing
problem for me and my children, but my relationship with my husband
won't survive."

You can hear Linda Pressly's programme about the Cuban housing crisis on
BBC Radio 4's Crossing Continents on Monday, 29 December, 2008 at 2030
GMT. It will be repeated on 1 January, 2009 at 1230 GMT.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/programmes/crossing_continents/7795891.stm

Published: 2008/12/29 10:52:39 GMT

Poultry farming in tatters.

31/12/2008 01:17:00
Cuba-Poultry farming in tatters.
CUBA.

HARD TIMES.
Cuba was hit by hurricanes Gustav, Ike and Paloma this year that totally
destroyed the poultry industry and the infrastructure of hatcheries and
broiler houses.

Despite financial assistance from China, Brazil and Venezuela, it was
the lack of building materials on the Island that was the biggest
problem in re-building again.

Suffice to say priority went to the homes and dwellings of the people of
Cuba, before farming could be considered and this has left Cuba with no
basics to re-kindle the industry.
Making matters worse crops were destroyed and washed away, the drying
sheds for tobacco were obliterated along with the tobacco within and the
sugar harvest was a non event.

The new government of Raul Castro had released the government hold on
farming, allocating small farms to anyone willing to work the land and
allowing them to pocket the profits

http://www.farminguk.com/news/Cuba-Poultry-farming-in-tatters.9629.asp

Amid hints of change, unseen leader shadows celebration of 1959 revolution

50 years later, Cuba watching for Castro
Amid hints of change, unseen leader shadows celebration of 1959 revolution
By Alan Gomez
USA TODAY

HAVANA — An illuminated sign facing Havana's boardwalk says it simply:
"50." And there are a few modest banners to commemorate what, under
other circumstances, might be a day of non-stop revelry, cigars and rum.

Thursday marks a half-century since Fidel Castro rolled into Havana with
his brother Raúl, Ernesto "Che" Guevara and their bearded band of
rebels. Yet, even among die-hard supporters, the anniversary of Cuba's
communist revolution has taken a back seat to questions about whether
Fidel will make his first public appearance since falling ill two years
ago — and whether Raúl, who has been in charge since then, can rescue
the island from its long malaise.

"We've been fighting for 50 years, and we can fight another 50," vows
Julio Garcia Perez, 63, a former soldier who received Soviet training
back at the height of the Cold War. "But we've got some big problems
that need big answers. We can't try to tinker little by little."

The anniversary comes at a critical time for the Castro brothers:
Dignitaries and the news media are flying in from across the globe to
attend a military parade on Thursday and perhaps catch a glimpse of
Fidel. Meanwhile, the incoming Obama administration has raised hopes of
a meaningful thaw in U.S.-Cuban relations.

Another no-show from El Comandante, who is 82 and has appeared only in
carefully staged videos and photos since undergoing intestinal surgery
in July 2006, would further cement the perception that Cuba has begun a
new era.

"The Cubans have moved on," says Jaime Suchlicki, director of the
University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies.
"Very few people are talking about Fidel anymore. They're all talking
about what Raúl is going to do."

That was true of Reyniel Castillo Lopez, who was hanging out by the
famed Malecon seawall late Monday with a friend, strumming a guitar. At
21, Lopez has known only the food shortages, collapsing housing and
other problems that followed the demise of the Soviet Union, Cuba's main
sponsor, and the tightening of the U.S. trade embargo.

"Everyone is waiting for things to change," said Lopez, who as a
saxophone player in a military band holds what qualifies as a good,
steady job on the island. "I wasn't alive when things were great. My
parents, my grandparents, they saw that."

However, like many Cubans, Lopez is guarded about just what kind of
changes Raúl, 77, is capable of bringing — especially since Fidel is
still formally head of the Communist Party and could be blocking any
moves that might undermine his legacy.

Raúl has shown signs of being more moderate than his brother by
instituting modest capitalist-style changes such as allowing Cubans to
buy cellphones and computers. He also has tolerated more criticism than
before. But it is still dangerous here to talk about the sweeping
democratic changes that 10 U.S. presidents — as well as the
Cuban-American communities in Miami and elsewhere — hoped would
accompany Fidel's departure.

Lopez, who like other Cubans in this story was interviewed in Spanish,
thinks the economy has improved slightly under Raúl, and he's willing to
give him time. "People say things would get better if this system fell,
but how do you know that?" he asked.

Indeed, any kind of appearance at the parade from Fidel — in person or
through a recorded video message — could prompt further speculation
about who is really in charge, and whether anyone can end Cuba's
economic isolation as long as Fidel is alive.

"I think Raúl and his gang are doing the best they can to keep (Fidel)
from going, because it really sends a message that (Fidel) … is still in
control," says Frank Mora, a professor of national security strategy at
the National War College in Washington.

Or, as Perez, the former soldier, put it using the colorful vernacular
so typical here: "If Fidel looks at a tree and thinks it's the greatest
tree in the history of the world, Raúl can't look at that tree and say
it's (expletive). That's disrespectful."

For decades after the Jan. 1, 1959, revolt when the Castros toppled Gen.
Fulgencio Batista's pro-U.S. regime, Raúl became accustomed to playing
second-fiddle to his more charismatic brother.

Fidel was all about cigars, fiery six-hour speeches in the tropical sun,
and the brazen anti-American brinksmanship that peaked with the Cuban
Missile Crisis of 1962, when Soviet installation of nuclear missiles on
the island, 90 miles from Florida, pushed the world to the verge of
all-out war.

Meanwhile, Raúl played the quiet technocrat, using his official post of
defense minister to expand the military's control of the economy to
eventually include hotels, domestic airlines and retail outfits across Cuba.

That background in business — or what amounts to it in communist Cuba,
anyway — raised hopes that Raúl would be a more pragmatic leader than
his brother.

When Fidel first became ill in 2006 (the official cause is still treated
as a state secret) and transferred power to Raúl, he shocked Cubans —
and more than a few outside observers — by openly welcoming critiques of
the economy and society as a whole.

"He deserves credit for explaining in detail some of the serious
economic problems that Cuba has," says Phil Peters, vice president of
the Lexington Institute and an adviser to the U.S. House of
Representatives' Cuba Working Group.

For months, Cubans saw things they rarely saw before. The
state-controlled newspaper published investigations detailing how theft
and graft in state-run businesses were hurting the country. Citizens
openly criticized their low wages, the difficulty of finding
transportation, the lack of goods and the inequity that is prevalent in
the socialist country.

Raúl Castro also introduced agricultural changes Peters believes could
be the most significant achievement of his tenure so far.

The government has started accepting applications from ordinary Cubans
to lease parcels of fallow, state-owned land for several years at a time
— a move that would would be heresy under strict communist dogma. That
change, along with new policies that allow farmers to sell crops
directly to neighborhood stores instead of government-run distribution
centers, could be critical for an island that will spend $2.6 billion
this year to import food.

Bruno Rodriguez, 59, a farmer who plants sugar cane in a farm just south
of Havana, says he has seen the positive effects. "You can see more
tomatoes in the store. More plantains. Things are getting a little
better there."

Asked whether there have been any other changes, he shrugs. "Everything
is the same."

The pace of change seems to have slowed since February, when Raúl
formally became Cuba's president. Peters sees a simple explanation.

"It's clear that there was a momentum of change that stopped, and it
correlates with an improvement in Fidel Castro's health," he says.

In a video released in July, Fidel looked vigorous as he chatted in a
sunny garden with Raúl and the ally who has taken over his role as
Washington's chief antagonist in Latin America — Venezuelan President
Hugo Chávez. Fidel looked gaunt and there was little sound in the video,
but it showed rare footage of him standing and effectively put to rest
rumors in Havana, Miami and elsewhere that he was on the verge of death.

Since then, hopes have faded for more systemic changes such as
eliminating the requirement that Cubans obtain a government-issued
"white card" in order to travel outside the country.

Thomas Shannon, the Bush administration's top diplomat for Latin
America, says the slowing pace of reforms shows how firmly entrenched
Fidel Castro's people are in the government bureaucracy.

"These changes, as small as they were, are still controversial within
the hierarchy of Cuban leadership, especially with those tied with
Fidel," Shannon says.

Even if Raúl Castro were facing stiff opposition, however, Shannon
believes he could have continued the economic changes and even begun to
change up the political system if he wanted to.

"A lot of people would like to think that he is a reformer who is being
held back by an aging and recalcitrant brother," Shannon says.

"But if he wanted to move faster, he could. There's no doubt that Raúl
has controls of the levers of power, both in the party and in the state.
I think all of this indicates that this is a very conservative government."

U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez — a Cuban American — has called
some of the other changes "cosmetic."

For example, being able to buy a cellphone was a good step, but with
$120 activation fees, it was impossible for most Cubans to purchase
them, says Suchlicki, the Miami professor. The average salary on the
island is about $20 a month.

"Allowing people to buy computers without access to the Internet is like
having a typewriter," says Suchlicki, referring to the government's
tight control over Internet access. "Those reforms were not reforms.
They were minor adjustments."

The most realistic chance for short-term change might come in relations
with the Castros' sworn adversary: the United States.

President-elect Barack Obama has stated that he wants to make
significant changes to U.S.-Cuba policy and has re-energized Americans
who hope to end the embargo in place since 1962. Obama has said he would
be willing to talk with Cuba; Raúl Castro has said he is open to that.

"Fidel, in many ways, was good at confrontation. He flourished in
confronting the United States. He needed it, it seemed," Mora says.
"Raúl doesn't feel that way. He senses that he doesn't need to continue
in this constant fight with the Americans for domestic political reasons."

Obama has said he would need to see some political changes in Cuba —
such as freeing political prisoners — before he agrees to open a formal
dialogue. But Shannon and others believe no such change has taken place.

Access to the Internet is still a privilege, not a right, that is
granted to government workers, employees of foreign companies and few
others. They must still get government permission to travel abroad. They
still cannot own property, move to a new home, buy a car or switch jobs
without government permission.

And if they speak out against the regime, they still face harsh punishment.

The regime "hasn't changed much at all," Shannon says. "One of the
policy conundrums we face is both sides seem to be looking at each other
and saying, 'You move first.' Someone's going to have to move
eventually. This is one of the questions for the next administration."

Even if the status quo holds, Cubans such as Jorge Fonte hope Fidel will
make an appearance this week.

"We have our problems," the 43-year-old waiter says. "But he's held us
together.

"I was born under him," Fonte says. "And as they say, 'If you don't love
your father, you can't love anything.' "

http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20081231/1afidel31_cv.art.htm