Archive for December, 2008

Complex Economic Situation Led to Large Budget Deficit in Cuba

December 29, 2008

Cuban Minister of Finances and Prices Georgina Barreiro Fajardo, said on Saturday that the complex conditions in which the Cuban economy developed in the year 2008 led to an increase in expenses and a budget deficit of 4.2 billion dollars.

In the presence of Cuban President Raul Castro, Barreiro presented the government’s budget plan for the year 2009, when the international scenario is expected grow more complicated, and the island’s income has been estimated to exceed 43.7 billion dollars while government’s expenses are calculated to be more than 47.5 billion.

The minister mentioned, as a permanent goal for the coming years, to have more income than expenses, from an increase in the quality of goods and efficiency of services, while keeping a stronger control on expenditure.

She reported that 63 percent of financial resources will be used on education, health, security and social assistance. Other sectors that contribute to the quality of life of the people will also benefit from that percentage such as culture, sports, communal services, science, technology and environment.

For a back-up to the investment process, 2.935 million pesos will be allocated, which will allow the continuity of the programs related mainly to the construction of houses, healthcare facilities and to the development of the energy, water systems and the transport infrastructure.

Georgina Barreiro noted that the control of budget resources should be one of the most important instruments to boost the social and economic development reached in 2008.

She ended her statement with a call to all administrations to be more rational when managing their budgets taking into account the hard economic situation the country is currently facing.

(Adelante.cu)

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In Cuba: More and More Tourists Prefer Cuba’s Jardines del Rey

December 29, 2008

Cuba’s Jardines del Rey consolidated its preference as a major tourist destination a in 2008, surpassing last year’s numbers by 6 percent.

In December alone, the arrival of vacationers registered a 28 percent increase, with over 90 percent of rooms occupied. The announcement was made during the celebration of the festival dedicated to the 15th anniversary of this tourist enclave.

Tourism Ministry representative in the central province of Ciego de Ávila, Luis Armando González, said that this tourist resort which includes Cayo Coco and Guillermo is in optimum condition to satisfy the demand of the high season.

The resort will be inaugurating the refurbished Sol Cayo Guillermo Hotel and a new facility with more than 300 rooms in the coming days.

Thomas Cook, the tour operator that moves the largest amount of tourists to and from this destination, was awarded with the Silver Ibis Prize during the Jardines del Rey Festival.

For its part, La Redonda center received a similar distinction, in correspondence with the number of attended visitors.

González highlighted that these increasing figures in Ciego de Avila’s northern cays were due to the quality of services, the comfort of facilities and the area’s natural beauty, all of which also significantly increase the number of tourists repeating their visit.

Most of the foreign vacationers coming to Jardines del Rey are from Canada, followed by Argentina, Russia and Colombia.

(acn)

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Hundreds of Cubans apply for Spanish citizenship

December 29, 2008

India News: Hundreds of Cubans are applying for Spanish citizenship as part of Madrid’s new ‘law of grandchildren’, which comes into force next week, EFE reported Saturday.

The new law makes provision for grandchildren of Spaniards born in Spain or exiled during the regime of Spanish dictator late General Franco.

According to estimates of the Spanish consulate in Havana, in the two or three years that the law will be in force, some 100,000 Cubans a year could obtain Spanish nationality.

Spain’s Law of Historical Memory opens the possibility for grandchildren of Spaniards to acquire Spanish citizenship either by showing that a grandparent was a Spaniard born in Spain, or by being the grandchild of someone exiled from the Iberian nation after Gen. Franco’s victory in the 1936-1939 civil war.

‘We have to be ready for anything. That’s what you have to do to win at anything,’ Francisco, a 48-year-old Havana resident, told EFE.

Francisco wants to become Spanish thanks to the right given him by being the grandson of a Spaniard and with the idea of seeking his fortune in Spain, where he has Cuban friends.

For Teresa, the 56-year old granddaughter of natives of Spain’s Basque region, the Spanish passport will enable her to travel to the United States because ‘you don’t need a visa.’

Others, like William, 38, do not make secret their opinion that Spanish citizenship for them is the chance to leave Cuba and find a better life, because in Spain ‘you can work, make money and live comfortably’.

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Raul Castro Announces Comptroller’s Office

December 29, 2008

HAVANA TIMES, December 28.- Dissatisfied with the current administrative control mechanisms in an economy dominated by the state sector, President Raul Castro announced Saturday the creation of a comptroller’s office directly under the Council of State, to assume functions of the current Ministry of Auditing and Controls. “We hope to contribute in a decisive manner to strengthen the strict compliance with obligations of all state management structures,” said President Castro. The comptroller’s office will not work alone to eliminate “deeply rooted vices” but will work hand and hand with the Attorney General’s office, the Communist Party and other institutions, he added.

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Cuba celebrates 50 years of Communism

December 29, 2008

Havana – On 1 January, Cuba celebrates the 50th anniversary of its Communist revolution, which ushered in decades of enmity with the United States, fueling one of the world’s most enduring and defining geopolitical dramas.

One of the world’s last communists strongholds, Cuba faces uncertain “structural reforms” promised by President Raul Castro, 77, after he officially took over in February from his ailing older brother and revolutionary icon Fidel Castro, 82.

After defying no less than 10 US presidents, Fidel Castro has now become a role model for a new generation of leftist leaders in Latin America, including Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez and Bolivia’s Evo Morales, both of whom may attend the celebrations in southeastern Santiago de Cuba, heart of the Castro insurrection.

Fidel Castro became Cuba’s larger-than-life president after ousting dictator Fulgencio Batista in a long, hard-fought rebellion.

Together with a band of bedraggled revolutionaries including late Argentine icon Ernesto “Che” Guevara, Castro emerged from Cuba’s rugged jungle on 1 January, 1959, to seize control of the island.

An event is planned for the evening of 1 January in Cespedes Park to commemorate Castro’s speech there 50 years ago that launched the revolution.

One month after the failed CIA-backed invasion of the Bay of Pigs, Castro’s revolution took on Marxist overtones in May 1961.

With his ubiquitous cigar and trademark straggly beard, Castro became a symbol of resistance to US imperialism.

The “Comandante” successfully thumbed his nose at ten US presidents for five decades during which Washington made several covert attempts on his life.

“It would be supremely naive to believe that the good intentions of an intelligent person can change what has been created through centuries of interests and greed,” Castro wrote in a letter to the Group of 20 major economic powers after the 4 November US election that brought the first African-American, Barack Obama, to the white House.

Cubans are hoping for a thaw in US-Cuban relations after Democrat Obama is sworn into office on 20 January, and better ties with the Cuban expatriate community.

Ernesto Caballo, who lives in the expatriate bastion of Miami, Florida, echoed some of the disappointment many Cuban exiles feel about their homeland.

“Things have changed here and we have not seen anything new in Cuba in 50 years of revolution,” he said.

Eloy Gutierrez Menoyo, who fell out with Fidel Castro and fled to the United States after serving 22 years in a Cuban jail, said the Cuban leader still believed in the revolution.

“But in order to believe in this revolution, I had to spend my youth in prison!” said Menoyo, who returned to Cuba in 2003 to join the opposition.

He plans to attend the 50th anniversary celebrations.

Branded US puppets by Havana, Cuban dissidents, divided and without a leader, say there are 219 “political prisoners” on the island.

During his tenure, Fidel Castro expropriated foreign companies, jailed his political enemies and drove some two million Cubans into exile.

But he also introduced historic reforms, including major education and health advancements that raised the island nation to the level of leading western countries.

Over five decades, Cuba’s 11 million inhabitants have endured a roller coaster ride, from a grinding four-and-a half-decade US economic embargo, the island’s economic collapse after the Soviet Union demise, and more recently Fidel Castro’s “retirement” after he fell seriously ill in July 2006.

The island was battered by three hurricanes in 2008, causing 10 billion dollars in damage – equivalent to 20 percent of Cuba’s gross national product.

One of a handful of remaining Communist nations in the world, Cuba has reached a time of uncertainty and change.

Raul Castro, has promised “structural reforms” – a departure from his older brother and leading member of the communist old guard.

But the changes have taken a back seat to the global economic crisis, as Raul Castro signaled in July, when he announced greater government control of revenues and tighter management of agriculture.

“It’s my duty to speak frankly, because it would be unethical to create false expectations,” he said after telling Cubans to expect tough economic times from spiraling international fuel and food prices.

On Saturday, the president called for new government spending cuts, but assured Cubans the economic and social reforms he had promised “have not been shelved”.

On the political front, however, Raul Castro has struck out on his own as a world leader, completing a Latin American tour in December and meeting with the presidents of Russia and China.

The island is abuzz with speculation on whether Fidel Castro will appear at the anniversary of the revolution he led 50 years ago.

He has not been seen in public view since he underwent gastrointestinal surgery in July 2006. – AFP

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Cuba Has New UN Ambassador

December 29, 2008

HAVANA TIMES, December 27.- The Cuban government announced that Abelardo Moreno has been appointed the island’s new ambassador to the United Nations. Moreno was a deputy minister of foreign affairs and served as interim ambassador since November when the former representative, Rodrigo Malmierca, was appointed minister of Foreign Investment and Economic Collaboration.

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Cuban Hotel Wins Int’l Award

December 25, 2008

Havana.- The Paradisus Río de Oro Resort and Spa, in the eastern Cuban province of Holguín, won the Marque of Excellence Award, granted by the tour operator Thomas Cook.

As an acknowledgement of the hotel’s high-quality services, Thomas Cook’s clients who stayed at the hotel chose the Paradisus Río de Oro for the award for the fifth time. The establishment also won the prize in 2002, 2004, 2005 and 2007.

The five-star all-inclusive hotel belongs to the Cuban group Gaviota S.A. and is run by the Spanish chain Sol Meliá.

Recently, the hotel was remodeled to improve its services. Works included the restoration of some of the restaurants.

The 2008 Marque of Excellence is the fourth international award granted to the Paradisus Río de Oro this year.

(DTCuba.com)

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Cuba: Tourism in Hundred-Year-Old Hotels

December 25, 2008

Cuba, a fast-growing tourist destination in the Caribbean, offers an excellent hotel infrastructure that is complemented by the island nation’s natural attractions, history and culture.

Dozens of kilometers of excellent beaches, a wide range of extrahotel options, varied cultural shows and health facilities are among Cuba’s tourist offers.

Modern hotels are available for tourists, as well as hundred-year-old establishments that provide excellent services to their guests.

One of those establishments is the Plaza Hotel, which will turn 100 years soon.

Inaugurated in 1909 in the former mansion of the Counts of Casa Pedroso, the Plaza Hotel is in Havana’s historic heart, across from Central Park and near the Grand Theater of Havana, a major cultural site for ballet and opera performances.

It is also close to the Capitol, which houses the Academy of Sciences of Cuba, the former Presidential Palace, the Museum of Fine Arts and the Church of Angel, which has a very attractive architectural style.

A stronghold of Cuba’s hotel business for many years, the Plaza Hotel underwent major restoration works in 1985 to add the amenities that it offers its guests today in its 188 rooms, where modern furniture is combined with antique ornaments and artworks by Cuban painters.

An interior patio surrounded by stained-glass windows is an attraction that you cannot miss, especially its beautiful fountain, in which a sculpture of a woman – made of Carrara marble – silently watches the visitors who trespass the threshold of the Plaza Hotel.

However, the Plaza’s fame comes from the guests who have stayed there. The list of illustrious guests also includes the Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova, who stayed at the Plaza Hotel on two occasions – 1915 and 1917. José Raúl Capablanca, a world chess champion and a glory of Cuba’s sports, played his first tournament in the hotel’s halls.

Another major hotel is the seven-decade-old Hotel Nacional de Cuba, which ranks among the top 10 Palace Hotels in the world and was the only five-star establishment in the Caribbean region from the 1930s to the 1950s.

The oldest Havana hotel is the Inglaterra, which was inaugurated on December 23, 1875, and was named after the major world power at the time, England.

(DTCuba)

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Web site lets Cubans abroad buy gifts on island

December 25, 2008

The Associated Press.

A country that shunned Christmas for decades is now looking to cash in on the holiday season, promoting an online shopping site designed to let Cubans overseas buy everything from flowers to flat-screen TVs for delivery to relatives on the island.

Spanish-based Grupo Excelencias teamed with Cuba’s communist government to create mallhabana.com, which offers prices in U.S. dollars and says it can deliver products within 24 hours to homes in Havana and get purchases to even the country’s most-remote addresses within three weeks.

‘It’s a good business but it’s also a way for Cubans (overseas) to help their family members here,’ Sergio Perez, the Havana director of the Spanish-language site, said Tuesday.

It also appears to directly challenge U.S. legal limits on shipping funds to Cuba or spending money on the island.

Dozens of the products listed are made in Cuba _ like Havana Club rum or iconic guayabera shirts. Others are imports already stocked by upscale government-run stores, such as 29-inch Panasonic TVs or crunchy peanut butter from Canada.

The site was created in August 2006, but Cuba’s government has been promoting it heavily over the Christmas holiday.

Cuba officially canceled Christmas as a holiday in 1966 and long discouraged citizens from openly celebrating it. But the Communist Party temporarily reinstated Dec. 25 as a holiday in 1998 after Pope John Paul II’s visit, and schools, government offices and businesses have begun to routinely close on Christmas in recent years.

This holiday season, baggers and cashiers at state boutiques are passing out copper-hued business cards bearing the mallhabana Web address and the slogan ‘Your Friendly Purchases’ to shoppers in Havana, hoping to entice purchases from visiting exiles.

The cards attracted so much attention that the luxury Palco supermarket on Havana’s western outskirts quickly ran out. The store sells expensive, mostly imported, goods to foreign diplomats, tourists and Cubans lucky enough to have hard currency.

Perez said the Web site has 20,000 registered customers and generates ‘millions of dollars annually’ in sales, though he declined to give specifics.

Payment requires a non-U.S. credit card _ a rarity among Cubans in the United States _ or direct money transfers to Excelencias’ Spanish accounts. Customers can also purchase U.S. money orders and ship them to company representatives in Canada, Perez said.

Such transactions would seemingly violate Washington’s nearly 50-year-old trade embargo, which generally prohibits most Americans and U.S. residents from doing business with this country and buying products of Cuban origin. The restrictions can even sometimes apply to third-country companies that operate on the island.

A U.S. Treasury Department spokesman in Washington declined to comment specifically on the mallhabana.com case. But Ninoska Perez Castellon, a Miami radio and TV host, said U.S. authorities have shut down similar such Web sites based outside Cuba in the past and she expects U.S. authorities will take similar action this time.

‘Apparently they think they can violate the law. It’s really pathetic,’ said Perez Castellon, a member of the Cuban Liberty Council, an exile group that opposes Fidel Castro and the Cuban government. ‘It’s the law, it’s clear and they are violating it.’

But back in Havana, Sergio Perez maintained that the site is doing nothing wrong.

‘The company is Spanish and the United States can’t do anything,’ said Perez, who is not related to Perez Castellon. ‘Anyway, we carefully guard the information of our registered clients.’

The site features a limited range of products at what Americans would consider sky-high prices.

The first item listed under ‘computing’ is a set of eight crayons. Further down the page, a Dell computer that would retail for roughly $450 in the U.S. is offered ‘on sale’ for $1,424. Imported products in Cuba are routinely marked up to over twice their retail value overseas, however.

Cuban state transportation company Transval, whose wide range of duties include managing a fleet of armored cars for Cuban banks, is in charge of home delivery of products bought online.

Even though Cuba has teamed up with foreign providers to offer Web-based shopping in the past, a special effort to promote buying for the winter holidays is unprecedented.

President Raul Castro, who succeeded his ailing 82-year-old brother Fidel in February, has lifted bans on Cubans buying DVD players, computers, electric rice cookers and other coveted consumer goods, but prices remain too high for many on the island to afford.

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Cuba says GDP rose 4.3 percent in 2008

December 25, 2008

The Associated Press

Cuba says its economy will grow 4.3 percent for the year, about half the original forecast, due to damage from hurricanes and the rising cost of food imports.

The report by Economy Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez, during a meeting with lawmakers preparing for a weekend session of Cuba’s parliament, was reported by government news media. He had projected 8 percent growth for 2008 last December.

The state news agency Prensa Latina reported that Rodriguez said “structural changes” and investment in production are needed to revive the island’s battered agricultural and industrial sectors.

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