Showing posts with label Cubans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cubans. Show all posts

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Congressional travel to Cuba surged last year - Raul Castro demands U.S. pay back Cubans for "damages," return Guantanamo - OPINION: Five ways Obama could make Castro pay Cuba"s $6 billion debt to Americans

Travel by members of Congress to Cuba shot up last year ahead of President Obama’s December executive action normalizing relations with the island nation.

Thirteen Democratic House members traveled to Havana in 2014 on at least three separate trips sponsored by nonprofit outside groups, according to travel reports members are required to file with the House Ethics Committee.

One of the trips, in which at least seven lawmakers participated, ended just one day before Obama’s Dec. 17 announcement of a détente with the Castro regime.

The visits coincide with a furious behind-the-scenes lobbying campaign from longtime advocates for normalizing relations with Cuba and pressing Obama last year that the time was right to make a bold move and ease sanctions and lift travel restrictions.


Read more on WashingtonExaminer.com

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Congressional travel to Cuba surged last year - Raul Castro demands U.S. pay back Cubans for "damages," return Guantanamo - OPINION: Five ways Obama could make Castro pay Cuba"s $6 billion debt to Americans

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Cubans celebrate renewed relations with US

Wednesday, December 17, 2014 | 6:44 PM    

HAVANA (AFP) — Cubans erupted into celebration Wednesday at news of a historic renewal in relations with the United States, voicing hope the breakthrough would change their lives amid economic decay.

In Havana’s old town, where overjoyed groups gathered in the street as the news spread, the phrase “historic day” was on many people’s lips as the more than 50-year-old Cold War standoff showed signs of ending.

“I have goose bumps all over,” said Ernesto Perez, 52, who works at a cafeteria in the capital.

In a sign of the communist island’s baby steps toward reform, Perez got the news on his cell phone — devices President Raul Castro legalized shortly after taking power in 2006 during a health crisis for his older brother Fidel, the father of Cuba’s 1959 revolution.

But in this country where the government still controls the media, Perez got the announcement from state news portal Cubadebate.

“It’s very important news that will change all our lives. I think everything is going to change. A lot of things can change, and for the better,” he said.

Many Cubans were at work or school when they got the news that the US had agreed to revive diplomatic ties and ease its five-decade trade embargo — an announcement made simultaneously in Havana and Washington by President Castro and his American counterpart Barack Obama.

The announcement caught many by surprise, despite tentative signs of a thaw in US-Cuban relations recently.

Bank employee Amelia Gutierrez, who is seven months pregnant, said she got a knot in her throat when she realized her baby would grow up in a new era for US-Cuban relations.

“He won’t have to live under the atmosphere of tension that has marked the relationship between Cuba and the United States for the past 50 years,” said Gutierrez, 28.

“This is great news. It’s a historic day. Cuba and the United States are neighboring countries. There’s no reason they should get along so poorly,” she told AFP.

“Only God knows if things will get better slowly or quickly. But this is a huge first step.”

Marlon Torrez, a 16-year-old student, said he hoped above all that the changes would help Cuba’s economy, which despite minor reforms has never been on solid footing since losing the vital support of the Soviet Union.

“This could open a lot of doors, especially in terms of trade between the two countries, which are very close neighbors,” said Torrez, one of the 7.7 million people on this island of 11.1 million who have lived their whole lives under the US embargo.

Many Cubans were also overjoyed at the return of three prisoners jailed for more than 15 years in the United States on spying charges.

The three, who have been declared “Heroes of the Republic” by the Havana government for fighting anti-communist Cuban exile groups, were exchanged for American contractor Alan Gross and an unnamed intelligence agent who had been caught working for the US in Cuba and held for two decades.

“It makes me incredibly happy that these three men can reunite with their families in Cuba. It’s about time,” said Bertha Perez, a 58-year-old librarian at Simon Bolivar House.

Hugo Cansio, a Cuban-American who runs a magazine called On Cuba, said the move was long overdue.

“Some of us have worked very hard for many years to bring about a change in policy between Cuba and the United States,” the 50-year-old businessman said in an email to AFP.

“Today is a great day, a historic day, the beginning of a new dream, a new opportunity for all Cubans.”

Dissidents crestfallen

  However opponents of the Castro regime were crestfallen.

“This was not the right time for these measures. They should have waited for a decisive gesture from Havana on human rights,” said former political prisoner Jose Daniel Ferrer, the head of the dissident Patriotic Union of Cuba in second city Santiago.

“But the move is already made,” he told AFP.

“We must use the openings that will be created under these measures.”

Dissident blogger Yoani Sanchez said the announcement meant that “Castro-ism has won.”

“Now we can look forward to long weeks of cheers and slogans in which the Cuban government proclaims itself the victor in its final battle,” she wrote.

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Cubans celebrate renewed relations with US

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Cubans aghast at car prices as new law kicks in

HAVANA, Cuba (AP) — Talk about sticker shock!


Cubans are eagerly flocking to Havana car dealerships as a new law takes effect eliminating a special permit requirement that has greatly restricted vehicle ownership in the country. To their dismay on Friday, the first day the law was in force, they found sharply hiked prices, some of them light years beyond all but the most well-heeled islanders.


A new Kia Rio hatchback that starts at US$13,600 in the United States sells for US$42,000 here, while a fresh-off-the-lot Peugeot 508 family car, the most luxurious of which lists for the equivalent of about US$53,000 in the UK, will set you back a cool US$262,000.


“Between all my family here in Cuba and over in Miami, we couldn’t come up with that kind of money,” said Gilbert Losada, a 28-year-old musical director. “We’re going to wait and see if they lower the prices, which are really crazy. We’re really disappointed.”


Cuba’s Communist-run Government traditionally has placed huge markups on retail goods and services paid for with hard currency, a policy that amounts to a tax on people who can afford such goods. The practice applies to everything from dried pasta, to household appliances, to Internet access.


The astronomical sticker prices on the cars will likely mean fewer sales and the state leaving money on the table, noted Philip Peters, a longtime Cuba analyst and president of the Virginia-based Cuba Research Centre.


“There’s a lot more money to be made at lower price points,” Peters said. “It’s a short-sighted tax man’s mentality. … Paradoxically, they mark it up so much that they’re not going to make any money. But that’s the mentality.”


Havana legalised the sale of used cars by private individuals in 2011. But long-standing rules remained in place requiring Cubans to obtain a Transportation Ministry permit to purchase a new or used car from state-run dealerships. Permission took months or years to obtain, resulting in a black market in which car buyers would often quickly flip them for a big profit.


The new law eliminates the need for a permit, but does not allow Cubans to import automobiles directly. The Government retains its monopoly on that, and alone decides a vehicle’s market value. Some exceptions will still exist allowing diplomatic missions and foreign entities to import vehicles.


The Ferrari-like price schedules for even mundane new cars are a signal that automotive scarcity and high demand will likely continue to reign in Cuba, which is famous for the 1950s American cars that still rumble through the streets long after they became museum pieces elsewhere.


Because replacing a car is so difficult, those lucky enough to own a finned Detroit classic or a boxy Russian import go to great lengths to keep them on the road as long as possible, swapping in makeshift parts and resorting to creative soldering.


At a used car dealership in western Havana on Friday, there were a few relatively affordable options.


A 1997 BMW was the cheapest vehicle and the first to sell shortly after the dealership opened at 8:00 am. It went for US$14,457 to a young man who declined to talk to reporters, so it wasn’t known how many miles it had previously logged.


But even many of the used cars had eye-popping asking prices, such as a 2009 Hyundai minivan that listed for US$110,000.


“Let’s see if a revolutionary worker who lives honourably on his salary can come and buy a car at these prices,” said Guillermo Flores, a 27-year-old computer engineer. “This is a joke on the people.”


In the past, permit holders typically bought used vehicles, often former rentals with high odometer readings that went for around US$5,000-US$8,000. New imports generally sold at about a 100 per cent markup before. There was no explanation for the sudden, across-the-board spike in prices.


Most Cubans still earn government salaries that average around US$20 a month, though some make significantly more as musicians, artists, employees of foreign companies and diplomats and doctors sent on foreign missions. Many others get financial support from relatives overseas.


But some who had managed to scrape together some savings said they’re now priced out of the market.


“With these prices … those who will be able to buy are the privileged, or the bandits,” said Alfredo Boue, a 25-year-old cook. “I think the bandits are not the ones (stealing) in the streets, but the people who set these prices.”


People were aghast and angry as they perused a list of prices posted outside the dealership. Some said it felt like something out of science fiction. One woman asked sarcastically if there were any bicycles, because surely that would be the only thing she could afford.


Priority was given to people who had obtained a permit under the old system, but Antonio Diaz, a 66-year-old retiree who came expecting to pay US$5,000, left empty-handed and disgusted.


“What am I going to do with this letter?” he said, brandishing his now-useless permit. “I can’t buy anything. I don’t have the money. That was supposed to be the car for my old age, which I was going to buy after a lifetime of work.”


“I’ll have to resign myself to living without a car,” Diaz said, shaking his head.


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Cubans aghast at car prices as new law kicks in

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Cubans allege sex abuse by Bahamian detention guards

MIAMI (CMC) – A Cuban family who arrived in the US from a migrant detention centre in the Bahamas has alleged that guards regularly beat some of the male inmates and sexually abused some of the women.

The Democracy Movement, a Miami group that has been helping undocumented migrants detained in Nassau, said one of the women repatriated from the centre to Cuba earlier this month was impregnated by a guard.Ramón Saúl Sánchez, Democracy Movement head, who greeted the family on their arrival, said a 24-year-old woman repatriated from Nassau to Havana last week reported that she was six months pregnant.The movement led a string of protests against the Bahamian government this summer after detainees at the Carmichael Road Detention Centre smuggled out cell phone images of inmates sewing their lips together in protest and an alleged guard kicking prisoners, according to the Miami Herald.Randy Rodriguez, 31, his wife Misleidy Olivera, 30, and their two children were the first detainees to speak in person to reporters about conditions at the centre after they arrived in Miami on a flight from Nassau.“That video is real, and after the video came the beatings” (by guards) as punishment for the negative publicity, said Rodriguez.However, Bahamas Foreign Minister Fred Mitchell has said the video is a fake and that the allegations are under investigation.“I wish to say that no one from the Bahamas government has admitted that there was any abuse of detainees by the Bahamas government,” he said in a statement.The Bahamas repatriated 24 Cubans to Havana on August 16 and another eight on August 21, including several of the alleged victims of beatings and sexual abuse.The Miami Herald said another 18 undocumented Cubans detained in the Bahamas will be allowed to fly to Panama, which has agreed to issue them “territorial asylum” while they try to arrange onward trips to the United States.Marleine Bastien, Executive Director for Haitian Women of Miami, who joined Sánchez at the news conference, said for several years Haitians have also complained about how they were treated at the Carmichael Road centre.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Cubans allege sex abuse by Bahamian detention guards

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

VIDEO: Cubans celebrate US visa reforms

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VIDEO: Cubans celebrate US visa reforms

Monday, August 5, 2013

VIDEO: Cubans celebrate US visa reforms

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VIDEO: Cubans celebrate US visa reforms