Cuba Reports 16 Percent Online In Some Capacity

AP:

About 16 percent of Cubans are online in some capacity with access to email, the island’s intranet or the worldwide Web, a government agency says.

Cuba’s National Statistics Office said in a report posted online this week that nearly 1.8 million of the country’s 11.2 million residents used some kind of “Internet service” in 2010, a 12 percent increase from 1.6 million the previous year.

The report shows a generally steady increase since 2005.

The U.S. trade embargo has long kept Cuba from connecting to nearby undersea fiber-optic cables, forcing the island to rely on slow, expensive satellite service.

Cuba currently has the second-worst connectivity rates on the planet, according to a report by Akamai Technologies Inc. But a $70 million undersea cable laid with Venezuelan help arrived this year and could come online as early as this month.

The new usage figure is separate from a survey last year by the same office that found only 2.9 percent of Cubans reported having access to the Internet, mostly through schools and workplaces.

The previous survey likely suffered from underreporting of access to black market dial-up accounts. It also was apparently more narrowly focused on direct access to the Web.

The island’s intranet is a limited but more widely available online service in which people can surf local sites and open email accounts to send and receive correspondence, including to and from other countries.

Outside experts put the real number of Cubans with access to the larger worldwide Web at about 5 percent to 10 percent.

Cuba treats its limited bandwidth as a precious resource and gives priority to usage deemed to have social merit, such as at universities. Scarce home dial-up accounts are expensive and not available to most Cubans.

The Statistics Office’s new report also cited a boom in cellphone usage since President Raul Castro loosened restrictions in 2008. While mobile users numbered just 200,000 in 2007, just over 1 million were registered by last year, it said.

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The battle of the blogs begins

ACCORDING to government figures, only 3% of Cubans frequently use the internet, making the communist island the least connected place in the Americas. Those that do require patience: according to an industry survey, Cuba’s dial-up internet access is the world’s second-slowest, after Mayotte, a French territory in the Indian Ocean. Under the guise of rationing the use of bandwidth, internet access is banned in most private homes and censored in offices.

For this sorry state of affairs, Cuba’s authorities have long blamed the United States’ trade embargo. They have a point. Although a fibre-optic cable, capable of carrying heavy data traffic, runs tantalisingly close to the island’s northern coast, George W. Bush’s administration blocked a proposal by AT&T to hook Cuba up to it. In 2009 Barack Obama authorised American companies to provide internet services to the island. But Cuba showed no interest in exploring the possibility. Instead it turned to its ally and benefactor, Venezuela.

Last month officials celebrated the arrival of a 1,600km (1,000-mile) fibre-optic cable laid along the seabed from Venezuela by a consortium including France’s Alcatel-Lucent and Britain’s Cable & Wireless. Venezuela’s government has put up the $70m it cost (including a second link from Cuba to Jamaica). Once fully connected in a few months’ time, it will raise data-transmission speed almost 3,000 times.

So will Cubans now have free access to the internet? The government has no fear of that, insisted Jorge Luis Perdomo, the deputy-minister of information. Yet last month it charged Alan Gross, an American arrested in 2009 for distributing satellite gear for accessing the internet to Jewish groups in Cuba, with spying. Mr Perdomo says that Cuba simply lacks the cash to install the necessary computers and routing gear. Nevertheless, it recently found $500m as an upfront payment to buy out an Italian group which had formed a joint venture with the state telecoms firm.

Officials know that they face a small but active band of critical bloggers. In practice, the government has found it impossible to block access to the internet completely. Many Cubans bypass curbs by buying internet accounts on the black market. The loophole they exploit is that senior managers, doctors and some academics are permitted home internet accounts. Some use this perk to supplement their state salary of $20 a month by selling their usernames and passwords for around $30 a month, often several times over.

In a video circulating in Havana, probably leaked by the government, an official promises to fight back against the American government’s use of social-networking sites to promote dissent. “They have their bloggers and we have our bloggers,” he says. “We will fight to see who is stronger.” Recently, for the first time in three years, Cuban internet users could access the website of Yoani Sánchez, an opposition blogger. Along with her many supporters abroad, a handful of government backers have taken to posting their hostile comments. A virtual battle has begun.

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U.S. contractor found guilty in Cuba trial

HAVANA (Reuters) – American contractor Alan Gross was found guilty on Saturday of working to destabilize Cuba’s communist government, Cuba’s state-run television reported, and now faces up to 20 years behind bars in the latest blow to U.S.-Cuba relations.

A panel of judges reached the widely expected verdict after two days of testimony including a vigorous defense by Gross, and now must decide his sentence, which will come in a few days, the report said.

Cuba accused Gross, 61, of distributing sophisticated satellite communications equipment for Internet access under a U.S. program that is outlawed and considered subversive by the Cuban government.

He was officially charged with “acts against the independence and territorial integrity of the state.”

Prosecutors are seeking a 20-year sentence for the longtime development worker, who has been jailed since his arrest in Havana on December 3, 2009.

Gross, who looked gaunt in a business suit on Saturday, can appeal the decision to Cuba’s highest court. Wife Judy Gross said he has lost 90 pounds (41 kg) in jail.

The United States, at loggerheads with Cuba for more than five decades, said he was providing Internet access to Jewish groups but committed no crime.

The case halted a brief warming in U.S.-Cuban relations and could do lasting damage if Gross is imprisoned for long.

Some observers think a political solution will be reached that will allow Gross to go free soon. But others believe Cuba has little interest in improving relations with the United States, which has imposed a trade embargo against the island since 1962.

Gross worked in Cuba on a tourist visa under a controversial U.S. Agency for International Development program aimed at promoting political change on the island.

The programs have been criticized in the United States for doing little more than provoking the Cuban government.

SABOTAGE

Cuban leaders view Gross’s work as part of long-standing U.S. efforts to sabotage the communist government put in place after Fidel Castro took power in a 1959 revolution.

In a recently leaked video of a Ministry of Interior briefing, an Internet expert equated Gross to the “mercenaries” who took part in the 1961 U.S.-backed and unsuccessful invasion attempt at the Bay of Pigs.

Internet access is limited in Cuba but the expert said the Internet is the latest front in the long ideological war between the two countries.

Cuba was expected to use the trial to put a spotlight on U.S. activities on the island, but excluded foreign press from covering it.

Judy Gross attended the trial with Gross’s U.S. lawyer Peter Kahn, who was an observer while Cuban lawyers conducted his client’s case.

“The family remains hopeful Alan will be home soon,” Kahn said in a statement.

Judy Gross has pleaded for her husband’s release on humanitarian grounds because their 26-year-old daughter and Alan Gross’s 88-year-old mother both have cancer.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in Washington on

Friday the United States was “deeply concerned” about the case and called for his release.

“He’s been unjustly jailed for far too long,” she said.

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Internet critic is identified in Cuba

Miami Herald:

The lecturer in a Cuban government video on the dangers of the Internet has been identified — on the Internet — as a 38-year-old counter-intelligence official who follows blogger Yoani Sánchez on Twitter. Eduardo Fontes Suárez’s Facebook page is now down.

But photos of him as a teenager and details on his education and the Havana neighborhood where he lives have been appearing in blogs about Cuba.

The video, which began getting attention Thursday on the Internet, showed an unidentified lecturer speaking to an audience of Interior Ministry officers about the dangers that the Web presents to the Cuban government.

“The Internet is a field of battle,” the lecturer declares as he argues that the U.S. government has tried at least since 2008 to use the Web to subvert the Cuban revolution.

Popular bloggers like Sánchez – she regularly criticizes the Cuban government — and even groups of young Cuban-Americans that reach out to their counterparts on the island are part of a covert U.S. campaign against the island, he adds.

By Friday night, the lecturer had been identified by readers of Penultimos Dias, a Spain-based blog about Cuba issues. Other blogs, including the Miami-based Café Fuerte, fleshed out his identity in the following days.

Fontes Suárez is a 38-year-old computer engineer who joined the Interior Ministry’s counter-intelligence section after he graduated in 1990 or 1991 from Havana’s Vladimir Ilich Lenin high school, which is reserved for the children of Cuba’s ruling elites, according to comments posted by visitors to the blogs.

He is the son of a lieutenant colonel in the Interior Ministry’s State Security Directorate — in charge of domestic security — and now lives in the Havana municipality of San Miguel del Padrón, according to the posts.

He’s married to Beatriz Basabe, a biochemist who works for the Nutrition and Food Hygiene Institute in Havana, where she carries out nutritional studies, according to another comment.

By Monday, Penultimos Dias had published three photos of Fontes Suárez as a teenager, but attempts to view his Facebook page were answered with the message, “This content is currently unavailable.”

“I don’t know how they are going to fight in the ’cyberwar against Cuba’ if they withdraw from Facebook. With those opponents, we’ve already won,” wrote one visitor to Penultimos Dias.

Other comments on the blog identified him as the holder of the Twitter account “Tatofontes” — Tato is a common nickname for Eduardo. The last Twitter he posted came near midnight on Dec. 15 – “Buanas (si, mal escrito) Noches La Habana — Good Night Havana.

The Tatofontes account shows he is “followed” by 92 other persons on Twitter and that he in turn “follows” 112 others. Among those he follows are Yoany Sánchez, pro-government singer Silvio Rodriguez and the El Nuevo Herald newspaper.

Traffic jams unlikely on Cuban data highway

HAVANA (Reuters) – A Venezuelan fiber optic cable should plug Cuba into high-speed Internet within months, but it may not immediately bring an explosion in connectivity to inhabitants of the communist-ruled Caribbean island.

Virtual highways in Cuba, known for its 1950s autos and low car ownership, are also dated and the small number of individuals logged on makes it one of Latin America’s least wired nations.

This weekend, a unit of the French company Alcatel-Lucent is due to start laying a 1,000-mile, $70 million submarine fiber optic cable from Venezuela, and it is due to reach Cuba’s southeast coast in February.

Havana says the connection should come online in June, but Cuban officials warn that technological and financial constraints will still not allow them to grant massive public access to the Internet.

“Deploying connectivity is not something you do overnight because it costs a lot of money and you need other investments,” Deputy Communications Minister Ramon Linares recently told the local media, in apparent reference to servers, routers and other network gear.

The limitations on Web usage have become a new front in Cuba’s long-running conflict with the United States, which, along with human rights groups, says tight Cuban regulations on Web access restrict citizens’ freedoms.

In turn, President Raul Castro’s government says the five decades under a U.S. trade embargo have blocked Cuba off from technology and mean it cannot yet afford to expand full Web linkups much beyond workplaces, education sites and hotels.

Socialist allies Cuba and Venezuela are united by their opposition to U.S. power. They see the fiber optic line, which also extends to Jamaica, as a way of emphasizing independence from Washington.

Cuba plans to use the 640 gigabit-per-second link, which is 3,000 times faster than the current system and financed by oil-rich Venezuela, to improve already existing access points such as those at information technology clubs, post offices and research centers.

Cuba reported 1.6 million Internet users in 2009, or 14.2 per 100 inhabitants, one of the lowest ratios in the hemisphere according to the International Telecommunication Union.

Like most of those users, the 40 people leaning over computers in a fluorescent-lit national post office in downtown Havana only have access to an intranet of government-approved sites and email services.

“There is not Internet here. Just email. You should go to a hotel,” said the supervisor while dozens more waited outside to check emails at $1.50 an hour. Full Internet for an hour at a four-star hotel costs $10, half an average monthly wage.

Cuba blames such high fees on the U.S. embargo which it says has for decades barred the island from hooking up to commercial fiber optics cables crisscrossing the Caribbean. For decades Cuba had no alternative but to route all communications via a costly and slow satellite link.

BYPASSING THE ‘EMPIRE’

Soon after taking office in 2009, U.S. President Barack Obama authorized U.S. telecom companies to take steps to connect Cuba to the Internet via fiber optics, arguing that increased information flows would better support U.S. goals of promoting democratic change in the country.

Experts say the regulations are ambiguous, and it is not clear whether Cuba would now be allowed to use existing fiber optics links passing close to its coast.

Little progress has been reported so far by U.S. telecom companies as a result of the 2009 measures.

A small Miami-based company called TeleCuba says it has been granted a license by the U.S. Treasury Department for a project to lay a cable to the island.

Many U.S. companies are nervous about dealings with Cuba, which nationalized all private enterprise in the 1960s and is only slowly opening up a limited private sector.

“Foreign investors are still kind of shy about investing in Cuba because of the freezes in assets and the fact they’re dealing with a opaque regime,” said Heather Berkman of political risk analysts Eurasia Group.

Cuba has largely ignored Obama’s telecom advances and insisted in seeking more Internet access through its friend Venezuela, more than 10 times more distant from its coast than the United States.

The Venezuelan cable, dubbed as “strategic” by both governments and first planned several years ago, should reach Cuba by February 8.

For Cuba, it means not only better access to the Internet but a much greater capacity for simultaneous long-distance calls.

Cuba’s arrival into the broadband-era comes as Castro introduces economic reforms aiming at modernizing the Cuba’s socialist system and allowing more small private businesses.

“The government will have to decide what it will use this greater bandwidth for,” said Sarah Stephens of the Center for Democracy in the Americas, a Washington-based group promoting better relations between the two countries.

“My hope is that it will enable more and more Cubans to take advantage of the benefits of this technology and it should be a helpful addition to the private sector activities that the government is trying to promote,” she added.

www.particularcuba.com

Fiber-optic cable linking Cuba to Venezuela, Jamaica to come online in 2011

Havana, Oct 9, 2010 (EFE via COMTEX) — A $70 million undersea fiber-optic cable that will link Cuba with Venezuela and Jamaica is due to start operating in July 2011, Cuban media reported.

The project, which will involve laying two pairs of submarine cable over a distance of 5,340 kilometers (3,320 miles), will dramatically multiply Cuba’s connectivity capacity, the official news agency Prensa Latina reported Friday, citing officials on the communist-ruled island.

Deputy Informatics and Communications Minister Alberto Rodriguez said the cable “will strengthen national sovereignty and security” in keeping with the integration aims of the eight-member Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas, or ALBA, an international cooperation organization founded by Cuba and close ally Venezuela in 2004.

The cable will enable “greater quality in info-communication services” and create “more favorable conditions for confronting future developments,” Rodriguez said at the start of a business forum in Havana.
The main cable will link the northern Venezuelan city of La Guaira with the southeastern Cuban city of Santiago de Cuba – a distance of 1,552 kilometers (965 miles) – and have a 640-gigabyte-per-second capacity, while the other segment will connect Cuba and Jamaica.
Waldo Reboredo, vice president of Telecomunicaciones Gran Caribe S.A., the Cuban-Venezuelan joint venture that will operate the undersea cable, said the “shark-proof” cable will be financed with Venezuelan bank loans as well as the company’s own funds and have a lifespan of 25 years.
Reboredo added that the cable will allow the island to “multiply its current data, image and voice transmission speeds by 3,000,” reduce operation costs by 25 percent and could be extended in the future to Haiti, the Dominican Republic and the Lesser Antilles.

But he noted that these technological advances “will not imply an end” to Cuba’s current satellite-based Internet service, which he said is “all Havana is allowed due to U.S. hostility.” Cuban authorities accuse Washington of preventing the island from accessing the Internet via undersea cables, one of which connects Cancun, Mexico and Miami and passes just 32 kilometers (20 miles) northwest of Havana.
Cuba has had a satellite-based Internet link since 1996 that offers a 65-megabyte-per-second upload bandwidth and a 124 Mb/s download bandwidth; according to the Cuban government, any modification of the channel must be licensed by the U.S. Treasury Department.
Havana blames the United States’ decades-old economic embargo on Cuba for high costs, slow speeds and the fact that Internet service on the island is almost entirely restricted to companies and some professionals in fields such as health and culture.

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Undersea cable network to benefit Cuba’s telephone service

HAVANA, July 14 (Xinhua) — The Venezuela-Cuba undersea cable network will benefit Cuba’s telephone development, said Maximo Lafuente, vice president of Cuban Telecommunication Company (ETECSA) on Wednesday.

According to Lafuente, the cable will cost 70 million U.S. dollars covering 804,500 km from La Guaira, Venezuela, to Santiago de Cuba, 1,384 km southeast of Havana.

It will be extended to Jamaica, the Dominican Republic and the Lesser Antilles. The Franco-Chinese company Alcatel Shanghai Bell is responsible for its operation which started two months ago.

Cuba’s international connection will increase with the remarkable enhancement of its transmission speed, said Lafuente.

Cuba has more than 1 million mobile phone users, accounting for about 10 percent of its population.

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Cuba’s golf future, promising but still far off

Reuters:

If Cuba plays it right, thousands of tourists could eventually be swinging their clubs at an 18-hole golf course overlooking the turquoise waters and golden beaches just east of Havana.

They will moor their yachts at a swank marina and drive electric carts to luxury villas built around the course’s scenic artificial lake.

The project, one of at least a dozen awaiting a thumbs-up from the island’s communist authorities, appears closer than ever to becoming reality after Tourism Minister Manuel Marrero said last month that Cuba will go ahead with the construction of golf courses and marinas.

www.cubaluxuryrent.comLetters of intent have already been signed between Cuba’s state-owned tourism company Palmares and several investors from countries such as Spain, Canada, Britain and even communist ally Vietnam, said a source close to one of the deals.

Cuba currently only has two courses. But sitting just 90 miles off the coast of the United States — the world’s biggest golf market with 27 million fans — its potential as a golf tourism destination is huge and so are the potential revenues.

“Cuba can be one of the strongest golf destinations in the Caribbean,” said Peter Walton, chief executive of the London-based International Association of Golf Tour Operators.

In the half century since Fidel Castro’s revolution turned Cuba into a communist state and its golf courses into art schools or military camps, the only well-publicized golf match has been between two guerrillas who hardly knew how to play.www.cubaluxuryrent.com

Castro and Che Guevara, who was a caddy in his boyhood days in Argentina, played golf in their military fatigues and boots in 1961 to thumb their noses at the U.S. government.

But even if today’s Cuban leadership has overcome its long-time ideological prejudices against the most capitalist of sports, the fine print regulating future joint ventures and real estate ownership remains a mystery.

Golf courses are generally financed by surrounding real estate developments, so the first thing investors will be looking at is Cuba’s willingness to sell or lease land to foreigners. To justify the investment, leases will have to extend for at least 50 years.

“They seem ready to accept the real estate developments. But at this point nobody knows the terms of the leases or the conditions Cuba may attach to the contracts,” said a foreign businessman involved in one of the projects.

PERCEPTION OF RISK

Over the years, several projects have been pitched to the Cuban government, including proposals by British architectural firm Foster + Partners, French construction company Bouygues Batiment International and, more recently, the Vietnamese Housing and Urban Development Corporation.

Most of the developments are planned along Cuba’s northern coast, including Havana and up-market resorts such as Varadero and Cayo Coco.

Besides villas and apartments, some of these projects worth hundreds of millions of dollars include full-scale, Western-style restaurants, supermarkets and shopping malls so far non-existent on the communist-run island.

But to see the rough hillsides of a suburb in Havana turned into smooth greens filled with foreign putters will probably take more than just reasonably long lease terms, says KPMG analyst Andrea Sartori.

“You need to have certain stability and guarantees to property ownership that I think the country currently doesn’t have,” said Sartori, the head of Golf Advisory Practice, a Budapest-based division of KPMG specialized in the industry.

“It is very much an issue of the perception and risk that an international investor will have in leasing a property in Cuba today.”

Although Cuba’s 1995 foreign investment law foresees the sale of real estate to foreigners, the experiment in the late 1990s was soon halted after limited sales of apartments.

Business sources say Cuba would seek to create joint ventures in which it would provide land in exchange for 51 percent equity, Foreign partners would then be responsible for a huge cash injection, a model similar to the one used two decades ago to develop the island’s hotel industry.

“That tends to bring down the returns (on assets) to foreign investors below the 15 to 20 percent they will be looking for,” said a businessman with experience in Cuba.

To break into the regional golf circuit Cuba would need to develop a cluster of at least 10 courses, foreign experts say.

YANKEE INVASION

Even if nobody says it, the investors behind these projects are betting on a future opening of American tourism currently prohibited by a Cold War-era U.S. ban.

President Barack Obama has lifted restrictions on the visits of Cuban exiles to the island but a Congressional bid to end the travel ban affecting other Americans seems stalled amid renewed political tensions.

“These golf projects will take time to develop and the relationship with the U.S can improve a lot in the next two or three years,” said Tony Zamora, a Miami-based Cuban American lawyer familiar with some of the deals.

But the challenges facing Cuba’s future golf tourism industry may also derive from the island’s own domestic problems.

Before building thousands of luxury villas for foreigners, a businessman says, Cuba will have to address its overwhelming housing deficit to deflate potential social tensions.

“The key ingredients of a successful golf destination are there — The climate, the proximity to a major market, the flavor,” said KPMG’s Sartori. “However there are key issues that need to be resolved.”

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Cuba trains Venezuela in military, communications

AP: CARACAS, Venezuela – It’s no longer just doctors, nurses and teachers. Cuba now sends Venezuela troops to train its military, and computer experts to work on its passport and identification-card systems.

Critics fear that what is portrayed by both countries as a friendship committed to countering U.S. influence in the region is in fact growing into far more. They see a seasoned authoritarian government helping President Hugo Chavez to protect his power through Cuban-style controls, in exchange for oil. The Cuban government routinely spies on dissidents and maintains tight controls on information and travel.

Cubans are involved in Venezuelan defence and communications systems to the point that they would know how to run both in a crisis, said Antonio Rivero, a former brigadier general whose break with Chavez over the issue has grabbed national attention.

“They’ve crossed a line,” Rivero said in a May interview. “They’ve gone beyond what should be permitted and what an alliance should be.”

Cuban officials dismiss claims of outsized influence, saying their focus is social programs. Chavez recently scolded a Venezuelan reporter on live television for asking what the Cubans are doing in the military.

“Cuba helps us modestly with some things that I’m not going to detail,” Chavez said. “Everything Cuba does for Venezuela is to strengthen the homeland, which belongs to them as well.”

But the communist government has a strong interest in securing the status quo because Venezuela is the island’s principal economic benefactor, Rivero says.

As Cuba struggles with economic troubles, including shortages of food and other basics, $7 billion in annual trade with Venezuela has provided a key boost — especially more than 100,000 barrels of oil Chavez’s government sends each day in exchange for services.

Rivero, who retired early in protest and now plans to run for a seat in the National Assembly, said Cuban officers have sat in high-level meetings, trained snipers, gained detailed knowledge of communications and advised the military on underground bunkers built to store and conceal weapons.

“They know which weapons they have in Venezuela that they could count on at any given time,” he said.

Cuban advisers also have been helping with a digital radio communications system for security forces, meaning they have sensitive information on antenna locations and radio frequencies, Rivero said.

If Chavez were to lose elections in 2012 or be forced out of office — like he was during a brief 2002 coup — it’s even feasible the Cubans could “become part of a guerrilla force,” Rivero said. “They know where our weapons are, they know where our command offices are, they know where our vital areas of communications are.”

Chavez has acknowledged that Cuban troops are teaching his soldiers how to repair radios in tanks and to store ammunition, among other tasks. No one complained years ago, he added, when Venezuela received such technical support from the U.S. military.

Cuba and Venezuela are so unified that they are practically “one single nation,” says Chavez, who often visits his mentor Fidel Castro in Havana and sometimes flies on a Cuban jet.

The countries plan to link up physically next year with an undersea telecommunications cable. The Venezuelans are even getting advice from President Raul Castro’s daughter Mariela Castro, who heads Cuba’s National Sex Education Center and advocated civil unions for homosexuals during a recent seminar in Caracas.

Some Venezuelans mockingly call it “Venecuba.” When the government took over the farm of former Venezuelan U.N. ambassador Diego Arria, he contested the seizure by delivering his ownership documents to the Cuban Embassy, saying the Cubans are in charge and “much more organized than the Venezuelan regime.”

“No self-respecting country can place such delicate areas of the government as national security in the hands of officials of another country,” said Teodoro Petkoff, an opposition leader who is editor of the newspaper Tal Cual. “President Chavez doesn’t trust his own people very much. So he wants to count on the know-how and time-tested experience of a government that for 50 years has been carrying out a brutal and totalitarian dictatorship.”

Cuban government officials, however, say the bulk of their assistance is in public services.

At the National Genetic Medicine Center in Guarenas, east of Caracas, Cuban doctors and lab technicians diagnose and treat genetic illnesses.

“What we came to do is science,” said Dr. Reinaldo Menendez, the Cuban director of the centre, which also employs Venezuelans. “Our weapons… are our minds, our work, our coats, our stethoscopes.

“We’re internationalists by conviction,” he added, passing photos of Chavez and Fidel Castro on the walls.

Cuban Deputy Health Minister Joaquin Garcia Salavarria co-ordinates missions involving more than 30,000 doctors, nurses, and other specialists from the island. He estimated that about 95 per cent of the approximately 40,000 Cubans in Venezuela work in medical, education, sports and cultural programs, and that others are helping as advisers on everything from agriculture to software for the state telephone company, CANTV.

As he spoke, Garcia flipped through a file of statistics that he said show the real impact of the Cuban presence: more than 408 million consultations in neighbourhood health clinics since 2003. That’s an average of 14 medical visits for each of Venezuela’s more than 28 million people.

Many Venezuelans are grateful for the free medical care provided by the Cubans, and waiting rooms are often bustling. Still, polls have repeatedly shown a large majority of Venezuelans don’t want their country to adopt a system like Cuba’s.

Chavez says he’s not copying Cuba’s socialist system but has adopted some practices, like creating a civilian militia to defend his government. When he founded a fledgling national police force last year, Chavez boasted that “we’re going to compete with the Cuban police force, which is among the best in the world.”

A senior Cuban police official, Rosa Campoalegre, has been in Caracas to help with plans for a new university for police and other security officials. She declined a request to be interviewed.

Cuban experts have also been working on systems in public registries and notaries. About 12 Cuban computer specialists from the University of Computer Science in Havana have been creating software to help the immigration agency improve passport control and computerize the identification card system, director Dante Rivas said.

“There’s nothing to hide here,” Rivas said. “What they do is develop the software, jointly with us, but we operate it exclusively. That’s all. They don’t do anything else.”

In Cuba, he said, the government uses a different system.

The island’s computerized civil registry includes all relevant data on its citizens, such as address, age and physical characteristics. All Cubans must carry an identity card, and those who want to travel outside the country must get special permission.

It’s especially worrying that Cubans are involved in areas “that have to do with control of information, people’s private information,” said Rocio San Miguel, who heads a Venezuelan organization that monitors security and defence issues.

Chavez, meanwhile, says Cuba’s assistance is worth “10 times more than the cost of the oil we send.”

He has effusively thanked Cuba for helping Venezuela to revamp its electrical system — a move ridiculed by Chavez’s opponents due to Cuba’s own struggles with power outages. Chavez also credited a Cuban cloud-seeding program with helping to bring an earlier rainy season this year after a severe drought.

“What Cubanization?” he said. “The Cubans are helping us.”

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Getting cell phones into Cuban hand

Globalpost.com:

HAVANA, Cuba — A cell phone is a handy device on this under-wired island. Just not for making phone calls.

Cuba’s state-run wireless monopoly, Cubacel, has some of the steepest rates in the world, charging the equivalent of 50 cents per minute for outgoing and incoming calls. In a country where the average salary is less than $20 a month, half a day’s wages can disappear with the first “Hola.”

And yet, with internet access on the island so limited, Cubans are increasingly connecting to the world through their cell phones, instead of the web. When friends or family members dial from abroad, the calls are free to receive. Ditto for international text messages.

Opponents of the Castro government sense an opportunity in this trend. The U.S. government, Cuban exile groups and dissidents on the island say cell phones can be a conduit of unfiltered information to ordinary Cubans. And the role of cell phone communication via Twitter in organizing protests in Iran and elsewhere has not gone unnoticed.

Only the Cuban government is not clamping down its network, but opening it up. Since Raul Castro lifted a ban on Cubans owning cell phones in 2008, the number of wireless accounts in the country has soared by 600,000 to more than 838,000 today, according to Cuban telecom officials.

Activation fees have been slashed from $150 two years ago to roughly $25. International calling rates are also being cut, and the number of wireless users in the country (pop. 11 million) is expected to grow to 2.4 million by 2015. The island’s GSM network already covers 70 percent of Cuba’s territory and further expansions are planned.

“We’re going to keep working to provide the benefits of telecommunications to a greater number of Cubans,” said Cuban telecom official Maximo Lafuente at a recent press conference in Havana. “There’s no doubt that cell phones are an important foundation to the country’s development.”

The U.S. government wouldn’t disagree, even if it has a differing type of “development” in mind. It views cell phones as direct channels of information to an island where the media is almost entirely state-controlled and less than 2 percent of Cuban households have an internet connection. Popular voice-over-internet-protocol services like Skype are also blocked by the Cuban government.

Last year, the Obama administration exempted U.S. wireless providers from longstanding trade sanctions against Cuba, calling increased communications with Cuba “our best tool for helping to foster the beginnings of grassroots democracy on the island.”

“This will increase the means through which Cubans on the island can communicate with each other and with persons outside of Cuba,” the administration said.

U.S. companies and the Cuban government haven’t signed any deals, though, and the chances of such agreements seem remote. The biggest obstacle is some $160 million in Cuban telecom assets that U.S. courts have seized to award Cuban American litigants who’ve sued the Castro government in absentia.

For the meantime, then, U.S. activists and organizations are simply aiming to get more cell phones into the hands of ordinary Cubans.

Roots of Hope, a Cuban American group in Miami, has started a campaign called “Cell Phones for Cuba (C4C),” urging supporters to donate phones that can be delivered for use on the island or recycled and used to purchase new devices.

The group says the phones will “provide Cubans with mobile news and information, help them make sense of the information, and enable coordination to act upon the information.”

United Nations statistics show Cuba has only 9.8 fixed phone lines per 100 inhabitants, among the lowest in the Western Hemisphere. That’s even fewer lines than Cuba had in 1958, the year before Fidel Castro came to power, when the rate was 15 per 100 inhabitants. So expanding wireless access enables Cubans who don’t have landlines to possess at least some form of communication device, even if few can afford to talk on the phones.

DIALING IN THE AMERICAS (Landlines per 100 inhabitants):

  • 1. Canada: 55
  • 2. United States: 51.3
  • 31. Cuba: 9.8
  • 35. (lowest) Haiti: 1.1
  • Entire region: 30.6
  • Source: 2009 U.N. International Telecommunications Union

Instead, Cubans primarily use the phones as text-messaging machines and glorified pagers. Users screen incoming numbers, then call back later from a public phone or the house of a friend or neighbor. Text messages are roughly 15 cents apiece — still a bit pricey — but also increasingly popular.

Even capitalist-style SPAM is beginning to contaminate the socialist island’s networks. Some Cubacel subscribers have been receiving text messages from entertainment promoters about upcoming parties or concerts, while others say they’ve gotten anonymous political messages with an anti-Castro bent sent to their phones.

Blogger and internet activist Claudia Cadelo said she welcomes the growth of cell phone use, but she said she thinks the government’s decision to grow its wireless customer base is sheerly economic. “I think it’s being done out of necessity,” she said. “But economic decisions also create openings in society.”

When Cadelo was briefly detained by Cuban security forces last November along with fellow blogger Yoani Sanchez, she used her cell phone to update her Twitter account from the back seat of the police car, alerting more than a thousand followers. The incident quickly became international news, drawing condemnation from the White House and European governments.

“Cell phones are an invaluable tool,” Cadelo said. “But they’re not a substitute for the internet.”

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