Cuban Honey, Sweet for Export and Bitter for Nationals

“A few years ago, honey was found in stores selling in pesos, but after the Ordering Task, it disappeared.” (Screen capture)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Mercedes García, Sancti Spíritus, 3 February 2022 — A teddy bear with a smiley face peeks out of a dollar store shelf in Havana. Inside the container rests honey that began its journey in the Cuban fields. The product that the authorities proudly displays hardly appears in the markets that take payment in pesos. Its destination is export or customers with access to foreign currency.

This week, the Mesa Redonda [Roundtable] show dedicated one of its broadcasts to beekeeping production in Cuba. The space was full of optimistic data and even more rosy future forecasts. But the sweet export figures do not manage to cover the bitter reaction of viewers, upset because the work of bees and producers hardly reaches the national tables.

“A few years ago, honey was found in stores that sold merchandise in pesos, but it disappeared with the Ordering Task*,” laments Lola, a 79-year-old retiree living in the Infanta and Manglar area of the Cuban capital. “In the cafeteria near my house you could buy it and it was not a luxury to have a little honey for breakfast, but those times are gone.”

“Safe honey, certified under the Apisun brand, is now only found in stores in freely convertible currency”, the woman complains. “He who does not have dollars cannot consume it”

Now Lola must appeal to the informal market, where the adulterated product abounds, the presentation is unreliable, the supply is irregular and a 750-milliliter bottle already exceeds 100 Cuban pesos. “Safe honey, certified under the Apisun brand, is now only found in stores that require payment in freely convertible currency (MLC),” the woman complains. “He who does not have dollars cannot consume it.” continue reading

But before reaching these markets, honey has a long way to go. In Sancti Spíritus, as in the rest of the country, production is mostly in private hands. “Many farmers join in because it is a line much better paid for by the State, since it is for export,” Mario, a state worker in the sector, explains to 14ymedio.

“There are three honey processing plants in the country, one of them, although small, was newly built in Caimito, Artemisa, which is now going to close because the floors have to be redone. The one in Sancti Spíritus is the largest and the one that collects the product from the center and part of the west of the country, when the Caimito plant can’t cope,” says the employee.

“For marketing, we take into account four categories of honey, based on color: LA (light amber), ELA (very light amber), W (white) and WW (water white). LA and W are basically produced in Cuba, Mario adds. “Although some beehive apiaries in this area are managed by the military, most of those collecting honey are private individuals.”

Among those private producers, in the province of Cienfuegos, is the family of Daniel García, a young man who helps his parents to care for their bees. “We have our hives near the coast, but we live inland, which is very common here.” At dawn, the young man and his father must go to the area to start extracting the product before the sun rises.

“People say that the bee is the one that does the work, but if the producer is not on top of it, taking care of it and watching over it, the bee ends up eating the honey”

“Compared to a charcoal burner or a farmer who harvests vegetables, we still earn more. But that money is more than well earned, because it is really hard work. People say that the bee is the one that does the work, but if the producer is not on top of it, taking care of it and watching over it, the bee ends up eating the honey,” he details.

“The State sells us the boxes for the hives and the products we need, there is no other way to get them,” Garcia points out. “Apicuba has been a privileged company compared to other sectors. We do not lack necessary parts because everything that is for export is given priority here.  If we ask for boxes or materials to protect the product, we’re able to get them immediately.”

“Currently, the producers of this province charge about 500 MLC for each ton of honey that we deliver, about three drums,” he explains. “Although on television a few days ago there was talk of payment in dollars, that is not true, the farmer never sees anything in dollars, but rather the payment is deposited on an electronic card that can only be used in state stores.”

The charge may vary depending on the category of the final product. “There are many types, although there are two main groups when it comes to marketing: organic and traditional. The first is produced in Cuba, mostly in the eastern zone, in protected areas over which planes do not even fly, and so on. The bees are in as natural an environment as possible,” explains Mario, the state employee from Sancti Spiritus.

“The one that is produced in Cuba is the traditional one, which also has very good quality due to the climate, the absence of long winters and the type of flowers we have,” he adds. “What many farmers do is take the honey rejected by the State and sell it on the informal market through intermediaries.”

“Everyone knows that producers do not sell only to the State, because with current prices of food and work tools, you have to look for money elsewhere”

However, the honey that moves in informal networks runs into several obstacles. “The packaging is a big problem because getting small-format bottles, with a secure lid and a certain attractiveness, is practically impossible for private beekeepers, so they put them inside recycled rum bottles and that limits consumer confidence.”

Adulterations are common, especially the thick syrup made from cane sugar some intermediaries use. “They add some coloring, molasses and as much as possible to stretch it,” explains the state employee. “There are people who, when they taste unadulterated honey, are amazed at the taste because they only know the one that has been manipulated.”

Mario is categorical: “Everyone knows that the producers do not sell only to the State because, although it is a sector that receives better payments than others, at current prices for food and work implements, it is necessary to look for money elsewhere, especially for the honey that is rejected because it does not meet the parameters.”

A few private and cooperative producers have managed to overcome the difficulty of packaging, even carving out a stamp for themselves by naming their product, placing a label on the jar and marketing a distinctive brand through digital sites or home delivery apps. Among them is Finca Marta, an eight-hectare farm, in the municipality of Caimito, in Artemisa.

At that location, one obtains white bell and romerillo de costa which customers like, and for which they pay about 5 dollars for 240 grams in an attractive jar, with an extra charge for home delivery. Last year, the place was involved in a controversy when Miguel Díaz-Canel published a postcard for Mother’s Day in which several producers from Finca Marta appeared.

The price ranges between 350 and 600 pesos depending on the size chosen by the customer, several times more than the price of honey without labels and in a recycled bottle from the informal market

The image generated harsh criticism for the women’s stylish clothing and the environment’s bucolic atmosphere, something that also increased rumors of differential treatment for this small company in relation to other private farms not promoted by the Government. Access to imported containers to sell their honey is one of the distinctions of the place, a privilege that very few beekeepers have.

One of the few with that possibility is Agrogourmet, another private management project, which markets its melipona honey in jars of 380, 700 and 1,000 grams through digital shopping platforms. The price ranges between 350 and 600 pesos depending on the size, several times more than the price of honey without labels and in a recycled bottle on the informal market.

Daniel García’s family, in Cienfuegos, is far from being able to market their own product with their own brand. “Even if we wanted to, we couldn’t, because with the money we earn now we have to buy part of the supplies, such as the colorimeters that the State sells in MLC,” he explains, referring to the device used to measure the percentage of light transmission through the honey and thus determine the color and moisture level of the product.

“In order to acquire containers with lids, labels and boxes for the shipping, we would have to establish an import or purchase contract for these supplies with a State company that would charge us, of course, in MLC. So, we would need a high initial investment in foreign currency that is now a dream in order to be able to count on that amount,” he details.

“A beekeeper has no time for anything but his bees, there are months that I only see my house in darkness because I leave at dawn and return at night,” he says. “But my family has to eat taro, pork, corn and plantain like any other, so the money I earn from honey goes for food. The bees are good for that, period.”

*Translator’s note: Tarea ordenamiento = the [so-called] ‘Ordering Task’ which is a collection of measures that includes eliminating the Cuban Convertible Peso (CUC), leaving the Cuban peso as the only national currency, raising prices, raising salaries (but not as much as prices), opening stores that take payment only in hard currency which must be in the form of specially issued pre-paid debit cards, and others. 

Translated by Norma Whiting

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An 11th July Detainee Stood Up in a Havana Courtroom and Shouted for Freedom for All

All the policemen, says Yudinela Castro, “seemed to have agreed on one point, and that was that they had not been given pistols to attend the marches, that they were not armed.” (14ymedio)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, 8 February 2022 — Around three in the afternoon last Friday, when the trial of 33 of the July 11th protestors in the Municipal Court of Diez de Octubre, in Havana was almost over, one of them stood up and shouted for freedom for all.

On seeing the unusual gesture, according to Yudinela Castro Pérez, the mother of 18-year-old Rowland Jesús Castillo, one of the defendants, tells 14ymedio, “immediately, the relatives began to applaud and they took us out of the room together with the defense attorneys.  

Castro, present that day in court, as on Tuesday and Wednesday, considers that the defendants’ defense attorneys “did a very good job.”

“They defended the young people one hundred percent, they fought hard,” the woman stresses to this newspaper, who expects the sentences to be announced this week, “because at most they said it could take up to five business days.”

On Wednesday, the Prosecutor’s Office had lowered the sentences requested for the youngest of the group, including that of Rowland Jesús Castillo Castro, who initially faced 23 years in prison, which was reduced to 12 years. “I am hopeful, because hope is the last thing that is lost, that the sentence against my son continues to fall.” continue reading

“Still, I feel heartbroken, because these seven months that he has already serves in prison, he should not have spent them in prison,” says the mother. “My son took to the streets to ask for freedom, to express what every person has the right to express. It was his feeling as well as that of all the young people who went out that day.”

Even if his sentence were lowered “to one year,” Castro argues, she still wouldn’t agree: “I’m going to continue fighting and demanding his freedom, no matter what it costs me.”

Her attitude, however, is not common among relatives of other defendants. “Other mothers are also complaining, but I have seen several who have become afraid of the threats from State Security and have remained silent,” she says.

The woman, who suffers from leukemia, emphasizes that she is going to count on strength she does not have to get her son out of jail: “My son is not a criminal, he is a wrestling athlete with several medals. He is not a murderer , he did not kill anyone so that they ask for that sentence.”

On the day of the trial, “when it was his turn to speak,” Castro narrates, the young Rowland “clearly said that he did not regret anything he had done, but that all he wanted was to be free, continue his studies so he could help me in the midst of my illness and be by the side of his own son, who needs him.”

Yudinela Castro has the care of her grandson, a little over a year and a half old, who “hasn’t seen his father for seven months.” This Monday, the mother was able to see her son at the Juan Manuel Márquez Pediatric Hospital, where he went to receive treatment for two inguinal hernias. “I hope to be able to see him again on February 10, when I have my statutory visit at the Prison for Young Minors in the West of Guatao.”

“When we left the Court on Friday, there was a strong operation outside the court, a cordon that made it seem that I was a fugitive from justice, because they say that I am relating to counterrevolutionary and terrorist people,” she protests. “But I have every right to ask for my son’s freedom.”

On Tuesday “there was a lot of lack of control” in the testimonies of the police officers who testified because “each one said something different.” The mother, however, points out that all the officers “seemed to have agreed on one point, and it was that they had not been given pistols to attend the marches, that they were not armed.”

This outraged her, “because in many videos that are circulating in the streets you can see when the police shoot at the protesters and the violent way in which they confront the young people,” some images, she asserts, that were not broadcast during the trial.

As for the support he is receiving, it is uneven. In her neighborhood, she says, people reject her: “Before I had friends who came to my house and now they don’t even call me on the phone because they say my line is tapped.” However, in Santos Suárez, where Rowland participated in the protest on 11J and where her father lives — and where, by the way, one of the last graffiti against Miguel Díaz-Canel appeared — it is different: “The neighbors show a lot of concern.”

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Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara, Seven Months in Prison Without Trial

Luis Manual Otero Alcántara

14ymedio bigger

 

Boris Mijatovic, Kassel, Germany, 7 February 2022

Dear Ambassador Ripoll Diaz,

I am writing to you to express my deep concern about the disturbing situation of the imprisoned artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara. The intention of this letter is to urge you to speak out in favor of his immediate release.

Mr. Alcántara, as an artist and member of the San Isidro Movement in Cuba, has always worked for artistic freedom and expression. After starting a hunger strike on April 25, 2021 to protest the destruction of his artwork by the police, he was forcibly transferred to a hospital a week later.

He left the hospital on May 31, 2021, but the police arrested him again in July 2021. Since then, Mr. Alcántara remains imprisoned without having been tried.

Last week, the Prosecutor’s Office announced that it rejected the request to change the measures to modify the pretrial detention. Therefore, Mr. Alcántara must remain in prison and is not allowed to wait for the trial at his home. As a consequence, Mr. Alcántara began a hunger strike again, to which is added the renunciation of visits and communications.

Mr. Alcántara is a non-violent political prisoner who was simply defending his right to freedom of expression. Therefore, it is imperative that you advocate for his immediate medical attention and release. Also, the family of Mr. Alcántara must be informed without delay about his state of health.

I remain at your disposal at all times to discuss in person the situation of Mr. Alcantara.

Sincerely,

Boris Mijatovic, Member of the Bundestag

Editor’s note: Boris Mijatovic is a member of the Green Party in Germany and a Member of Parliament for his hometown of Kassel. We reproduce in full the letter that he addressed to the Cuban ambassador in Berlin, Ramón Ripoll Díaz, asking him to intercede for the freedom of Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara.

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In the Absence of Tourists, Havana’s Deauville Hotel Sells ‘Combos’ for 5,000 Pesos

About thirty people gathered this Wednesday at the doors of the Deauville hotel in Havana. (14ymedio)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Juan Diego Rodríguez, Havana, 9 February 2022– About thirty people are crowding at the doors of the Deauville hotel in Havana this Wednesday, and they are not tourists nor do they carry suitcases. Loaded with boxes and crates full of empty beer bottles, they line up to buy food and drink combos for 5,000 pesos each.

Two packages of sweet cookies, two bottles of wine, a kilogram of cheese, one of ham, a package of coffee, a tub of ice cream and a case of beer are part of the lots put up for sale by the establishment, closed since the covid-19 pandemic reached the Island in March 2020.

“They cannot be bought separately, but must be bought together,” warned one of the clerks, who indicated that if the customers did not bring empty bottles for the beers, they would not sell them the combo either. They did sell some bottles of Havana Club rum separately.

“People have such a need to resell and they are so eager to buy anything, that they mark their places in line like crazy and then go out terrified to look for empty bottles,” a neighbor tells this newspaper, stunned by the crowd and the haste. continue reading

A passer-by approaches and hesitates to stay in line, because the transaction is not clear. “This lends itself to a deception, because the prices are not separated. Who tells me what they are charging for in those 5,000 pesos?” he complains.

The Deauville, a few meters from the Malecón wall, is located in the municipality of Centro Habana and in one of the poorest neighborhoods in that area. Outside the tourist perimeter of the historic center and also distant from El Vedado, the hotel stands out in an environment of deteriorated houses, faded facades and buildings on the verge of collapse.

“They cannot be purchased separately, but must be bought together,” warned one of the shop assistants. (14ymedio)

The surrounding area was the site of several of the most intense images of protests during the Maleconazo of August 5, 1994, a popular revolt that gave rise to the so-called “rafter crisis.”

But the establishment has also been a source of income for the neighborhood’s residents, who, when the hotel is at its busiest, provide private taxi services, tour guides, informal tobacco sales and even prostitutes to guests.

Like the entire sector, this state-owned hotel is not going through its best period. Tourism in Cuba has collapsed in the two years of the pandemic, going from 4.2 million travelers in 2019 to just half a million in 2021. The figures are dramatic when compared to those of other countries is the Caribbean, which is the high season at the moment. While the Dominican Republic recovered the 73% of visitors it had before the pandemic, Cuba only had a small fraction of the travelers in 2019.

This Wednesday’s sale is one of the “advantages” of living a few meters from the premises, since for months merchandise of this type has barely appeared in stores that will accept payment in Cuban pesos.

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Nicaragua Sends Coffee and Rice to Cuba as Humanitarian Aid

The ship ’Augusto C. Sandino’, launched by Nicaragua for the first time in 2018. (Minrex)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, 7 February 2022 — The ship Augusto C. Sandino is once again on its way to Cuba from Nicaragua with humanitarian aid. The ship, which set sail this Sunday from the river port of El Rama, carries 36 containers, 21 of which contain coffee and 15 of rice.

It is the fourth shipment that the Nicaraguan government has sent to Havana since last August, after the July 11 protests. That Sunday, thousands of Cubans took to the streets demanding freedom, but also food and medicine, in the midst of an economic crisis unprecedented since the 1990s.

The Sandino already made the same trip at the beginning of December, with a shipment of 50 containers, with a total weight of 1,007 tons, of coffee, beans and household goods. Before, in August and September, Managua had sent shipments of about 30 containers each.

The official press has touted this new donation, attributing responsibility for the economic crisis “to the intensification of the economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed on the Island by the United States,” without mentioning that the Island buys large quantities of food and medicine from that country every year. In fact, the US is the main supplier of frozen chicken to Cuba. continue reading

The Nicaraguan government of Daniel Ortega, whose democratic deterioration has been condemned by the international community, including the United States and the UN, is thus consolidating itself as one of the main allies of the Cuban regime, as it was at the beginning of the Sandinista revolution, in the 1980s, when Fidel Castro sent troops and weapons to Managua.

Managua’s decision, last November, to establish “visa-free” entry for Cubans has been the spigot of the mass exodus that the Island is experiencing these days. Hundreds of Cubans take planes daily to Managua with the ultimate goal of reaching the United States by land.

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Chest Tumor Successfully Removed from 49-Day-Old Baby in Cuba

The local medical team was reinforced with two experts from Havana and the minor underwent emergency surgery. (Granma)

14ymedio biggerEFE (via 14ymedio), Havana, 8 February 2022 — A Cuban medical team successfully removed a chest tumor that complicated the vital functions of a 49-day-old baby, official media reported Monday.

The intervention that saved the life of Annalie, who suffered a cardiac arrest due to the teratoma, was a “milestone for Cuban medicine,” according to the official digital media Cubadebate.

The problem was discovered when the patient arrived at the José Luis Miranda children’s hospital in Villa Clara due to possible covid-19 infection and respiratory problems were discovered.

Various tests, from X-rays to an echocardiogram and an ultrasound, showed that the baby had a teratoma that “compressed vital structures such as the heart, the respiratory tract and the large blood vessels located in the center of the chest.”

It was “a benign tumor that, due to the compression of vital organs, behaved like a malignant one,” summarized the neonatal surgeon and head of that service central Cuba, Abel Armenteros. continue reading

The local medical team was reinforced with two experts from Havana – since transferring the patient was too risky – and the baby underwent emergency surgery.

The operation, which lasted an hour and a half, was completed successfully and the postoperative complex, with antibiotics and “extreme care” in the intensive care unit, is evolving favorably.

According to the official Granma newspaper, the director of the children’s hospital, Jesús Sánchez Pérez, assured that the progress of the baby, fifteen days after the intervention, is “very positive.”

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Cuba Declines to Participate in the Under-18 Baseball World Cup for Fear the Players Will Flee

Cuban athletes in the Under-18 category will not see action in the World Cup scheduled for next September. (Twitter/@francysromeroFR)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, 7 February 2022 — The fear of the flight of players, as happened last year in the Americas Qualifier held in Florida or the Under-23 World Cup in Mexico, has led Cuba to make the decision not to attend the Under-18 World Cup. Media pressure is another reason, according to journalist Francys Romero based on close sources, causing the authorities to decide not to participate in the competition, which will be held this coming September in Sarasota and Bradenton, USA.

This absence represents the Island’s second year out of the competition, as it was not present last year due to the covid-19 pandemic, according to what the Government told the World Baseball and Softball Confederation.

“Throughout history, these tournaments have represented a kind of motivation for youth players in Cuba,” Romero said. Traveling abroad means “a prize” and also an opportunity to emigrate for youth athletes who will now have to wait for future years.

In May 2021, the Cuban Baseball Federation (FCB) reported that César Prieto, Andy Rodríguez, Lázaro Blanco and the team’s psychologist left the Cuban nine and decided to stay in the United States. The federation still had not recovered from these “desertions” when, in September of the same year, 12 athletes dropped out, the worst figure in history.

Trying to avoid the “bleeding of players”, the Cuban Federation plans competitions with Under-23 teams, but while this does not materialize, the weekly abandonment of youth is a constant. On February 5, it was continue reading

announced that Luis Enrique González left the island without specifying the destination. A day before Roger Trench escaped to the Dominican Republic. Also on the list are Yunior Tur and Yosimar Cousín and Loidel Chapellí Jr.

In the first half of January, El Nuevo Herald published that at least 15 Cubans, at the age of 16, began to sign their contracts with one of the 30 Major League clubs, and made reference to Cristian Vaquero with the Washington team, Dyan Yamel Jorge with Colorado, and Oscar Luis Colás with Chicago.

The youth seek to be hired by teams from the United States, as well as Canada, and Japan, with whom the FCB has agreements has begun approaches for prospects who might exit. “It is one of the missions of the Cuban Federation, to manage the contracts of Cuban players,” declared the national director of Baseball, Juan Reinaldo Pérez, on the Bola Viva program last Tuesday.

Pérez spoke of “freedom” for athletes to seek contracts beyond MLB. However, these contractual relations must be “under the protection of the FCB.” The salary, he specified, is negotiated between the club, the federation and the athlete. The player “receives 100% of his salary” and for the training right between 10% and 25% is agreed with the club, and “this money is paid to the federation.”

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The ‘Iliad’ Sells Better Than Fidel Castro or Che in Havana’s New Alma Mater Bookstore

On most of Alma Mater’s shelves the “educational texts” multiply, with the words “Che” or “Fidel” on their spines (14ymedio)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Juan Diego Rodríguez, Havana, 7 February 2022 — The best-selling book in the Alma Mater bookstore, recently reopened in Havana, is not Capital or some title by Marta Harnecker, but Homer’s Iliad.

Located in a small corner of the premises, where most of the customers gathered on Monday, the Greek classic appeared with other greats of literature, such as Pere Goriot, by Honoré de Balzac, or La casa de Bernarda Alba, by Federico Garcia Lorca.

“Oh, but how has this book sold!” said the shop assistant to one of the young men who was carrying a copy of the Iliad under his arm. “Outside of that, there is very little of interest,” confessed the customer.

The price of these international titles, between 10 and 15 pesos, also favored their purchase, despite the fact that their edition is of very poor quality. “The other propaganda books have a more elaborate cover, and even then nobody buys them,” joked another buyer, in his 50s.

In the rest of the shelves, “educational texts” multiply, with the words “Che” or “Fidel” on their spines. “Don’t you have The Golden Age?” another young woman in her twenties asked about a title by José Martí. “We don’t have it yet but we are going to have it, at the end of the month or the beginning of March,” assured the shop assistant. continue reading

The bookstore, located on the corner of Infanta and San Lázaro, was reopened this Sunday, after being closed for more than a year and under construction. A chronic clogging problem, linked to the flow of sewage from the upper floors of the building, had flooded the basement and affected the structure.

Alma Mater, which owes its name to its proximity to La Colina university, has in recent years also been a navigation room for the national intranet and a hall for official events. However, for taxi drivers and those over 70, this business with the glass windows that serve as a reference to so many are still referred in the old way: Lámparas Quesada, the private business located on the site before 1959.

On the afternoon of January 27, shortly before a crowd passed by as part of the official March of the Torches, the residents of the area murmured that the opening was imminent and was destined to please the eyes of Miguel Díaz- Canel and Raúl Castro, both in the front row of the parade.

However it couldn’t even be made ready for the occasion. There was barely time to create a set of furniture and lights. “What they did was put some furniture in the middle of the salon, to make it appear that there was something, because there was nothing else,” says a local resident sarcastically. “In case el designado [the hand-picked president] arrived or looked through the glass when he passed by.”

During the reopening event, this Sunday, with the presence of several Communist Party officials and academic authorities, it was announced that 186 titles, 36 issues of academic journals and 300,000 copies of more than 22 Cuban publishers are for sale at the store.

Amanda García Roche, director of Academic Publications and of the University of Havana Publishing, which manages the bookstore, praised the “reunion with a space that we all profess much love for and missed” and assured that it “reopens completely restored,” although the haste to meet a date raises fears that this may not be the case.

The act, full of solemnity, included several speeches, dozens of chairs placed in the nearby Martyrs’ Park and a security operation that left the residents of the neighborhood without the chance of buying “not even a button” in the informal market until that the enchanted visitors left. The cutting of a white ribbon sealed the umpteenth reopening of the premises.

“Here they have given a few coats of paint, fixed the lights and started selling, but we have doubts about how long it will last until the shit comes out from under the door again,” questions a neighbor who lives above the nearby Cuban Post Office of and who passes every day in front of the bookstore.

The furniture that has been placed in the spacious living room seems to be a prop. “They are like the ones used in some television programs,” a young man who came to review the titles for sale sneered this Monday. The metal shelves, attached to the walls, and some in the center were few relative to the large room, whose floors had been polished so much that more than one person slipped.

From this February 6, the collective exhibition of posters of The Wild Swan, inspired by the verses of Luis Rogelio Nogueras Wichy, and carried out by Visual Communication students of the Higher Institute of Design, will also be exhibited in the bookstore .

Among the most repeated titles is the magazine Economy and Development, published every semester by the Faculty of Economics of the University of Havana, but it does not seem to arouse much interest in these times of crisis, inflation and the loss of purchasing power of thousands of Cuban families.

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The True History of the United States Trade Embargo on Cuba

A man walks in front of a mural in Havana that features the Cuban Revolution and theUnited States embargo. (EFE/File)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Luis Zúñiga, Miami, 5 February 2022 — On June 5, 1960, Fidel Castro ordered the nationalization of the Texaco company’s oil refinery in Cuba.  The following month, on July 5, he ordered the seizure of the two remaining US refineries, Shell and Esso. Castro let the owners know that there would be no monetary compensation for the nationalizations. The response of the president of the United States was to cancel the sugar quota of 3 million tons that the US bought annually from Cuba.

A month later, in August 1960, Castro ordered the nationalization without compensation of 38 US companies, including the 36 sugar mills they owned and the telephone and electricity companies. In addition, he imposed an extraordinary increase in tariffs on imports of American products.  Washington then made the decision to suspend the export of merchandise to Cuba, with the exception of medicines and food. Two months later, in October 1960, Castro ordered the nationalization of all foreign banks and the confiscation of all remaining US companies in Cuba. The total value of those seizures was assessed at the time at just over $1 billion [translator’s note: roughly $9.4 billion today].

On January 3 of the following year, 1961, diplomatic relations were severed. A few months later, in March, the US Congress passed the Foreign Assistance Act and President John F. Kennedy, based on it, ordered a trade embargo on Cuba.

By excluding the United States from payments for nationalized properties and businesses while giving payment guarantees to the rest of the affected countries, Fidel Castro demonstrated that his action was based on hatred of that country and the desire to start a confrontation with it. The explanation given by President Kennedy to Congress for imposing continue reading

the embargo on Cuba was to defend the interests of US citizens arbitrarily dispossessed of their legally established companies in Cuba.

LEGALITY OF THE EMBARGO

With very small differences, all the legislation of the democratic countries of the world coincide in the definition, conception and application of the laws related to the nationalization of foreign properties and businesses. The classic definition states: “The nationalization measures entail an obligation on the part of the nationalizing State to pay fully for the damages to the injured foreign owner. The expropriation must be followed by a prompt, adequate and effective compensation to the owners.”

Numerous governments around the world have nationalized foreign properties, but generally those governments have compensated the owners adequately. Russia, Venezuela and Brazil nationalized the oil industries, Bolivia the natural gas industry and Chile the copper industry, just to mention a few examples of countries in the region.

CORRECT DEFINITION: BLOCKADE OR EMBARGO?

The Castro regime calls the embargo a “blockade” with the evident purpose of magnifying its impact and presenting itself as a victim, which, logically, arouses sympathy or pity in the world because Cuba is a small country and the United States is a large and powerful one. This propaganda manipulation has been used with remarkable efficiency and has been replicated by all the world’s leftist governments. But what is true and undeniable is that the aggressor was the Castro regime and the US embargo was the response to the confiscatory aggression, which, by the way, is still maintained to this day. Castro persistently refused to pay the Americans whose property was confiscated while he compensated all other foreign businesspeople.

In addition to false, the use of the word “blockade” is bombastic. Historically, the economic blockade of a country implies measures that have not been used in the case of Cuba, such as surrounding the country with warships and blocking the airspace to prevent goods and supplies from reaching that country. The United States did this against Haiti in 1993, seeking to force the Haitian military regime to return political power to the last democratically elected president in that country, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Cuba has no US ships or planes surrounding it.

A blockade also implies that the country cannot trade — that is all access to the country is blocked — and Cuba trades with the entire world. A blockade must include the impossibility of carrying out banking and financial transactions with other countries. Cuba conducts normal transactions with other countries. The only such transactions that are limited or controlled are those directly with the United States or those subject to restrictions for suspected links to terrorist groups, money launderers or their front people.

In short, the island of Cuba is not subject to any blockade.

THE EMBARGO BETWEEN 1962 AND 1991

In that nearly 30-year period, between 1962 and the disintegration of the USSR, Castro rarely referred to the US embargo in his speeches. From the beginning of 1960, Castro began to receive economic and financial aid from the Soviet Union and from all the communist countries of Eastern Europe. Politically, Castro mocked the sanctions, implying that they did not affect him and that they had no impact on his national or international decisions.

In addition to free economic and military aid, the Soviets extended extensive lines of credit to Castro. In 2015, the amount of the debt for these lines of credit with the former Soviet Union, today Russia, was officially known: just over 35 billion dollars. That figure confirms why Castro did not even mention the US embargo. With the end of the Soviet Union in 1991, the subsidies and credits that kept the regime afloat economically ended. From that moment on, the embargo became the subject of constant complaint by Fidel Castro and his regime.

RELAXATIONS TO THE COMMERCIAL EMBARGO

Some presidents of the United States have modified the restrictions imposed by the embargo, seeking with these incentives to get the Cuban regime to improve the situation of human rights on the island. In 1975, Gerald Ford issued an executive order that allowed foreign subsidiaries of United States companies to sell their products to Cuba. The volume of trade between the subsidiaries of the United States and Cuba reached, in 1991, the figure of 718 million dollars.

President Jimmy Carter also introduced changes to the embargo. In 1977, he authorized trips to Cuba by exiles who had relatives on the island. That change meant an important economic injection for the Cuban regime and Castro then allowed those trips that were previously prohibited for Cuban exiles. This Carter modification is what makes it possible for billions of dollars in remittances to reach Cuba every year. In 2018, the year before the coronavirus pandemic, exiles sent some $2.5 billion to their relatives in Cuba.

Bill Clinton, in 1992, increased the limits on sending of money remittances to Cuba up to 300 dollars per month and authorized the visits of groups of religious, students and academics to Cuba. The then president also authorized the Castro regime to buy any amounts of medicine and food if they were paid for in cash. The measure was later expanded to include clothing, shoes, and a wide range of items.

The figures of the volumes of food purchases that the Castro regime began to import from the United States varied according to the economic situation. The following are the rounded figures from the United States Department of Commerce regarding the values of food exports to Cuba between 2000 and 2021:

Year 2000: 498 million dollars;
2001: $532 million;
2002: $553 million;
2003: $395 million;
2004: $392 million;
2005: $350 million;
2006: $560 million;
2007: $641 million;
2008: $710 million;
2009: $528 million;
2010: $363 million;
2011: $363 million;
2012: $464 million;
2013: $359 million;
2014: $299 million;
2015: $185 million;
2016: $241 million;
2017: $291 million;
2018: $271 million;
2019: $286 million;
2020: $176 million;
2021 (through September): $235 million.

Some imports to Cuba are striking. In 2020, the Castro regime imported $70.6 million worth of beer from the United States. In 2015, it imported whiskey worth $61.3 million. In 2003, newsprint for $4.4 million.

The United States is Cuba’s fifth largest trading partner in terms of trade volume. In addition, according to the US Department of Agriculture, that country supplies about 96% of the rice and 70% of the poultry products consumed in Cuba. It also exports wheat, corn, soybeans and their derivatives on a large scale.

Additionally, between 2014 and 2020, the US authorized the sending to Cuba of donations of a wide range of medical products, special foods and medical equipment worth almost 36 million dollars.

With these exports and donations from the United States to Cuba, what blockade is the regime talking about? In reality, the remaining restrictions of the Act are not even consistent with the concept of a trade embargo.

OTHER AMERICAN COLLABORATIONS WITH CUBA

Due to the serious epidemiological crisis that the Island is suffering, in November 2021 President Joe Biden authorized the US airlines IBC Airways and Skyway Enterprises to carry out charter flights with humanitarian aid. The planes would transport up to 7,500 pounds of medical supplies, food, medicine, hygiene items and other supplies that cannot be purchased on the Island.

In August 1960, Castro ordered the nationalization without compensation of 38 US companies, including telephone and electricity companies. (Archive)

A revealing fact about the falsehoods of the Castro regime regarding the embargo occurred on July 15, shortly after the massive protests in Cuba. That day, the Prime Minister, Manuel Marrero, issued an order lifting, until the end of the year, the restrictions on the entry of food and medicine that travelers may bring to Cuba through the airports. That restriction on the entry of these products from the United States had not been imposed by the United States but by the Castro regime itself.

THE PROPAGANDA OF THE EMBARGO REGIME IS MASSIVE AND DISTORTED

The propaganda about what the regime calls the “blockade” is constant, identifying it as the cause of all the country’s problems, the shortages of both food and medicine as well as construction materials, buses, trains, electric light bulbs and even paper. Many wonder, what do things Cubans don’t have available to them — such as the raising of pigs, chickens and cows, the cultivation of potatoes and vegetables and the fishing of shrimp and lobsters — have to do with the embargo?

The propaganda is so intense that even educated Cubans who are not sympathetic to the regime say that “the embargo must be eliminated in order to remove the constant excuses that the regime’s officials use so as not to be responsible for their failure.”  Unfortunately, these people do not understand that the regime does not sustain itself with “excuses,” but with terror and police repression.  They do not understand that the communist dialectic is always looking for scapegoats to blame for the mistakes and failure of its centralized economic system. If a factory does not meet the production plans, the culprit is not the communist economic system, but the official in charge of fulfilling the plans. If the country does not progress, the cause is that other nations deny it loans, but they never mention that they do not pay their debts…

When Barack Obama restored diplomatic relations with the Cuban communist dictatorship, the regime began to prepare for the possibility that the US would lift the embargo. And what did they do at that time? Well, they carried out a “study” on the damage caused by the “blockade” to the Cuban economy.  The calculated amount was $822.28 billion. Thus, if the United States lifted that sanction, the regime’s next demand would be that it compensate “Cuba” with that amount. Of course, the United States would not do it, and there they would have the next excuse ready for the economic and financial disasters that Cuba would continue to suffer under Castroism. Shortages would be “justified” then by alleging that the United States did not want to pay the damages and we have to work many years to ‘heal’ the economy… The dialectic capacity of communists to create excuses is infinite.

The economic, financial and productive disaster of the Castro regime is identical to the one that was suffered and is suffered by all the communist regimes that have existed. Their economic system simply doesn’t work, but the communists will never accept it. That is part of their dogmas. Whoever does not understand it, gets confused and may end up believing in those absurd excuses.

THE ECONOMIC SANCTIONS IMPOSED BY PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP

All of the above information supports the conviction that the US trade embargo on Cuba has been more theoretical than practical. The only prohibition that has had an impact on the Castro regime has been to give it access to credit in the United States.

This has prevented the Castros from plunging future generations of Cubans even further into debt. This reality becomes clearer to understand when we investigate the gigantic amount of money that the Castros have borrowed on behalf of the nation and that they have not repaid. The regime has never informed the people how those funds were used. The list of money (in dollars) received by the regime (and never repaid) is as follows:

– Russia : 35 billion. That country forgave 90% of the debt in 2014.

– Paris Club : 11.1 billion. The Club forgave 8.5 billion in 2015.

– China : 6 billion. That country forgave 100% of the debt in 2011.

– Argentina : 2.7 billion. Foreign Minister Felipe Solá demanded payment from Cuba at the last CELAC summit.

– London Club : 1.4 billion in commercial debts. They have already sued the regime in an English court.

– Romania : 900 million. None of it has been repaid.

– Brazil : 561 million. The Bolsonaro government has tried to collect the debt, but without success.

– Mexico : 487 million. That country completely forgave the debt in 2013.

– Spanish companies in Cuba : 325 million. They haven’t been repaid.

– Czech Republic : 276 million. They haven’t been repaid.

– Hungary : 200 million. They haven’t been repaid.

– South Africa : 137 million. That country completely forgave the debt in 2012.

A total of more than $59 billion dollars that the regime has received, that it has not returned to the lenders and that was not used to solve any of the multitude of needs that Cubans have suffered for decades, such as the lack of housing, transport problems, water supply and rural electrification, among others.

It is well known that the priority of the regime in the use of the country’s resources is what it needs to stay in power. Thus, for example, the last credit that Russia has granted the Castro regime for 50 million dollars, in October 2018, will be used, according to the Russian newspaper Kommersant, to acquire armored vehicles and helicopters. With the severe food crisis that Cuba is experiencing, this is one of the priorities of the regime.

Many will have seen the photographs that the Government published of the fleets of patrol cars that they bought for the Police and State Security, but they have not bought a single ambulance, despite the terrible lack of them. The Mercedes Benz agency in Cuba “took pity” on the people’s suffering and made a gift of 18 ambulances last March.

The priority is to strengthen the repressive and military apparatus that keeps them in power. For that indisputable reason, it is necessary to apply economic sanctions that cut off their income. Based on these premises, the ones that then President Donald Trump imposed on the Castro regime had the objective of cutting off the income of the regime’s military companies that, as we know, have appropriated businesses that produce dollars, including hotels, gas stations, hotel shops and restaurants, currency exchange offices, food markets taking payment only in dollars, rental cars, tourist taxis, etc.

The sanctions imposed by Trump were:

Cancellation of cruise ship trips to Cuba: Each ship that arrives on the island must pay, on average, 13 dollars per passenger for the right to dock at the port and thousands of dollars more in supplies and services to the ship, including fuel. All this money goes to the coffers of military companies and it is money that is used, primarily, for repression (purchase of patrol cars for State Security and the Police, protection and attack equipment for Special Troops, electronic means for surveillance of opponents, to pay for high salaries and benefits for the police to help in the repression and for the enormous costs of the hundreds of prisons where opponents are imprisoned).

Application of the Helms-Burton Law: This measure stops the unscrupulous foreign investors who are going to take advantage of the companies confiscated from their legitimate owners and that contribute millions of dollars in investments to the Castro military. In addition, those foreign investors will pay the regime directly for hired labor — and not the Cuban employees — the salaries in dollars, of which the military keep 90%.

Returned Cuba to the list of countries that do not collaborate in the fight against terrorism: This sanction places the Castro regime in a fair place. In Havana, for example, there are living the leaders of the Colombian National Liberation Army (ELN), who organized the attack with a van loaded with explosives at the police school in Bogotá that caused the death of 21 people in 2020. Colombia has requested the extradition of the ELN commanders, but the regime protects them. The same is happening with the FARC, with members of Hezbollah and Hamas, and with so many other terrorist groups that found a safe haven in Cuba.

In addition, this sanction is what has prevented the Cuban military, through its company Fincimex, from taking control of remittances sent from the United States to relatives in Cuba. Fincimex is the main Cuban partner of foreign credit card companies and the Western Union money transfer company that processes the largest volume of dollar shipments to Cuba. The sanction included the recommendation to use non-military Cuban companies to send money to Cuba.

Personally sanctioned several high-ranking Castro officials and soldiers linked to the repression against citizens who express some form of discrepancy with the regime: This includes individuals such as as the Minister of the Interior, Lázaro Álvarez Casas; General Romárico Sotomayor, head of the Political Directorate of the same ministry; and General Pedro Martínez Fernández, head of the repressive “red beret” troops. It also sanctioned Raúl Castro and his children Alejandro Castro, Nilsa Castro, Deborah Castro and Mariela Castro, as well as Raúl Castro’s former son-in-law, General Luis Alberto Rodríguez López-Calleja, president of Gaesa. The sanctions prohibit entry to the United States for them and their close relatives, as well as the freezing of funds and properties in that country. Many Cubans on the island do not know that several of those sanctioned people have traveled to the United States as tourists or as official and have purchased apartments. Many sons of those soldiers and officials of the regime even have bank accounts and properties there.

None of these measures increases the hunger of the Cuban people. None of them cause shortages of food or consumer goods. They are measures focused on taking income away from the repressive military apparatus that sustains the dictatorship.

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

Russia Will Have a Digital Attache in Cuba to Promote its Information Technology

Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko. (Kremlin)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Madrid, 7 February 2022 — Russia will have a digital attaché in Havana to promote its information and communication technologies in Cuba, according to Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko speaking on Monday.

The Island will not be the only one to welcome one of these envoys; up to 16 countries that will do so, including Brazil, Malaysia and Vietnam. The rest are considered candidates such as Germany, South Korea, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Singapore, the South African Republic, Thailand and Turkey.

“According to our forecasts, the ’digital aggregates’ will begin to work this year in 16 countries,” said the senior official, as published today by the Russian agency Sputnik. The position is newly created and is one of the novelties created by the Ministry of Digital Development, the Ministry of Industry and Commerce and the Fund for the Development of Information Technologies within a package of measures to support the area.

The goal of these digital ambassadors is “to encourage exports of digital solutions from Russia,” Chernyshenko added. But, in addition, they will help national companies in the technology sector with information, analysis, legal support and advice in the countries where they are posted. continue reading

According to the Deputy Minister of Digital Development, Maxim Parshin, “the digital attachés must be well oriented in Russian and foreign software, understand the competitive advantages of domestic products and know Russian and international laws in the commercial field.”

According to analysts, Russia is one of the countries that has most highly developed the strategy of hybrid wars, which include disinformation and cyber attacks to guarantee an advantage and generate opinions.

In recent years, Russia has been accused of interfering in some democratic processes, including the 2016 US presidential elections. Russia also appears behind cyber attacks and has developed the Internet Research Agency (IRA) to flood social networks through use of bots and trolls.

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At Least 184 of the 187 Trials in Cuba in January were for the July 11th (11J) Protests

Images of the trial of J11 protesters in La Güinera broadcast on state television. (Capture)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Madrid, 3 February 2022 — The Madrid-based Cuban Observatory of Human Rights (OCDH), denounced the continuing “repressive spiral in Cuba,” amid the silence of Spain, the European Union, and Latin America. In its last report, the organization documented 643 repressive actions in January, of which 136 were arbitrary detentions and 507 other types of abuses.

Although Spain and the European Union have expressed concern over the repression, arrests, and the July 11th (11J) trials and have also demanded the right to protest, OCDH considers these expressions insufficient, “given the grave situation,” and interprets these as complicity, according to its executive director Alejandro González Raga.

The Observatory’s report includes the trials of July 11th protesters in the count of human rights abuses in the first month of the year. These proceedings, it affirms, are manipulated, with witnesses who favor the official version, and an inappropriate application of the law by judges who are not independent. “Of the 187 documented trials, at least 184 have been for the protests,” the report specifies.

These are followed by harassment, surveillance of homes, summons, and threats or fines, with the intent to intimidate. Seven activists were forced into exile, the OCDH confirmed.

“The situation in Cuba is worse by the day. The announcement of a new Penal Code, which even turns some rights conferred in the Constitution into crimes and maintains the death penalty, increases concern at this time. European diplomats as well as the office of Michelle Bachelet at the UN have placed much hope in the regime’s new laws. What will they do now?” said González Raga who thanked the artists who have canceled their participation in the San Remo festival in Havana. continue reading

Also this Thursday, Cuba Próxima, which is also based in Spain, published a statement in which the organization denounced that on Tuesday historian Leonardo Fernández Otaño, member of its Deliberative Council was summoned, interrogated, and subjected to demeaning treatment, by agents of the Department of State Security.

Fernández Otaño protested alongside Camila Rodríguez, Carolina Barrero, and Daniela Rojo at the entrance to the People’s Municipal Tribunal of Diez de Octubre on Monday, the first day of the trial for 33 of the J11 protesters. The three women were detained for several hours, but although he was not arrested he did have to appear before State Security.

“Why are Leonardo Fernández Otaño and other citizens being criminalized? For openly advocating for the release of hundreds of Cubans unjustly imprisoned,” the statement laments, in addition to commending the activist’s work at a time when moral support and solidarity were needed by those affected, who are mostly poor.

Cuba Próxima rejects the arbitrary summons and without the presence of a lawyer, experienced by many activists and opponents in Cuba, beginning with the case of Fernández Otaño and argues that their objective is to bend the will of the affected so they renounce their rights. Furthermore, they express solidarity with the most recently affected, specifically those who participated in the protest on Monday, among them Arián Cruz Álvarez Tata Poet, Leonardo Romero Negrín, and Alexander Hall, in addition to Saily González, arrested in Santa Clara.

Among the demands of the association are an end to the repression of activists and their family members, and the initiation of an investigation into who committed these abuses of power, specifically who tried to suppress the protests on July 11th.

Lastly, they denounced the long sentences faced by the defendants and confirmed their “commitment to fight for the release of all political prisoners, the construction of a pluralist Republic, democratic, based on and oriented toward respect and the exercise of all human rights, sociopolitical inclusion, rule of law and political agreements and seeking the welfare of the Cuban nation.

Translated by: Silvia Suárez

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Third Consecutive Sunday with Arrests of Ladies in White in Cuba

Moment of the arrest of Berta Soler, on January 30. (Capture)

14ymedio biggerEFE (via 14ymedio), Havana, 7 February 2022 —  Several Ladies in White were arrested this Sunday, the third in a row, when they went out to protest demanding the release of the prisoners arrested for the anti-government marches of July 11, some activists reported this Monday on social networks.

Among those detained are the leader of the opposition group, Berta Soler, and her husband, Ángel Moya, who were arrested temporarily detained as they left the organization’s headquarters in Havana.

Moya denounced on Facebook that they were violently arrested, held in police stations for about eight hours and then released after a fine was imposed.

Other Ladies in White, including Caridad Burunate, reported similar situations on Facebook.

Two weeks ago, the Ladies in White announced that they would resume their Sunday protests to demand the release of political prisoners, after a break forced by the pandemic. continue reading

On the first Sunday, at least six women, including Soler, were arrested as they left the organization’s headquarters in Havana and released the next day. Last Sunday Soler was the only one detained.

So far, neither the Cuban authorities nor the official media have confirmed the events.

The Ladies in White movement emerged in 2003, following a wave of repression by the Cuban government that was called the Black Spring, when 75 dissidents were arrested and convicted with long prison sentences. Two years later the Ladies in White won the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought from the European Parliament.

The European Union and NGOs including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International criticized that wave of arrests, calling them political. The Cuban authorities condemned them alleging that they acted against national sovereignty on orders from the United States.
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The Courage of the Mothers of the Youth of July 11th (11J) Forces Cuban Prosecutor’s Office to Reduce the Sentences

Demonstration of activists and relatives in the Juan Delgado Park in Havana, in favor of the 11J prisoners tried in the court of Diez de Octubre this week. (Capture)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, 3 February 2022 — On Wednesday the Prosecutor’s Office reduced this Wednesday its initial request for sentences for the six minors of 11J (July 11th) protests who are being tried this week in the Municipal Court of Diez de Octubre, in Havana. This was reported by Yudinela Castro, mother of the young Rowland Jesús Castillo, who now is one of 12 facing a request for 23 years in prison.

This decision comes when the protests of Cuban families multiply and, also, the international denunciations against the harshness of the regime towards the young protesters of last July 11.

The US Embassy in Cuba recently described the trials of the minors as “shameful,” and has repeatedly called for their immediate release. Likewise, last January the Cuban Observatory of Human Rights reported to the UN and Unicef that there are a total of 39 minors under 21 years of age detained for the 11J protests.

According to Yudinela Castro, in statements to Martí Noticias, speaking of Brandon David Becerra Curbelo, for whom they were asking for 18 years – one more year than he currently has – now weighs a request for five years of correctional work without internment. continue reading

The rest of the minors under 18 on trial have also seen their possible sentences reduced: Kendry Miranda Cárdenas and Lázaro Noel Urgelles Fajardo, 20 years and 13 years in prison, respectively, to 10 years, and Nayn Luis Marcos Molinet and Giuseppe Belaunzarán Guada, from 17 years and 13 years in prison, respectively, to 8 years.

Castillo’s mother also announced that this Thursday, the defense lawyers would request the elimination of the crime of “sedition” for which the young people are prosecuted and which is the one that supports these high sentences.

At the moment there is no additional information on the process, in which a total of 33 protesters are tried, some of them present on July 11 at the emblematic Toyo corner, where a police car ended up overturned.

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EFE Will Be Able to Work in Cuba if it Exercises ‘Objective, Truthful Impartial and Non-biased Journalism’

The Cuban authorities withdrew the accreditations of all EFE personnel in Havana last November without justifying their decision and returned only two later. (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)

14ymedio biggerEFE (via 14ymedio), Havana, 3 February 2022 — The Cuban government said this Tuesday that it is willing to “find a solution” with respect to the Spanish news agency EFE, after limiting the work of most of its journalists on the island.

The International Press Center (CPI) of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs thus responded on Twitter to the statements made the day before by the Spanish Foreign Minister, José Manuel Albares, in which he asked that Efe be able to operate in Cuba as it works in Spain.

The CPI stressed that EFE “continues to work with absolute freedom in Cuba,” but demanded “unrestricted respect” for its constitutional order “for the exercise of objective, truthful, impartial and non-biased journalism.”

The Cuban authorities withdrew the accreditations of all EFE personnel in Havana last November without justifying their decision and returned only two journalists’ credentials later.

Of the seven journalists that Efe had in Cuba at the beginning of the year, currently only two can work, one of whom is required to renew their accreditation monthly. continue reading

In addition, the new head of the delegation, appointed in July, has not yet received their press visa and has not been able to enter the country.

The Cuban organization that manages the international media in the country also stressed “that it has been in permanent conversations with the directors of Efe and the Embassy of Spain” throughout this situation.

Albares said this Monday that “everyone, including the Cuban authorities,” are interested in the EFE agency being able to continue working in Cuba, which is why Spain continues to request that the withdrawn accreditations be restored.

“I think that all of us, including the Cuban authorities, have an interest in EFE being able to continue working from Cuba and not from other places,” he stressed in his speech at the Senate’s Ibero-American Affairs committee.

The foreign minister added that the ministry is “fighting so that Efe stays in Cuba, and for it to stay in Cuba they have to let it work just like it works in Spain.”

At the beginning of January, the president of Efe, Gabriela Cañas, affirmed that the agency did not want to leave Cuba and would not leave on its own initiative, but that the decisions of the Cuban authorities are forcing her to rethink her stay in the country.

Cañas stressed that both the agency and the Spanish authorities believe that “EFE should be” in Cuba, where it has been for 50 years and has one of the largest offices of an international media outlet on the island, and stressed that half of the news about Cuba that are published in Latin America come from Efe offices.

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Cuban TV Announcer’s Program Canceled for Supporting July 11th (11J) Prisoner

Luis Mario Niedas, 31, with his grandmother, before being arrested on July 11. (Family archive)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, 3 February 2022 — Sunday was the last day that the announcer Luis Ángel Cruz Gómez presented his program A Very Different Sunday on Radio Vitral, from Sancti Spíritus. The space had not even been on the air for a month, the host’s wife, Mildrey Betancourt, said on the networks, but the directors, without giving reasons, announced that they would “stop for a while.”

As reported Monday by the religious and activist Mario Félix Lleonart, the suspension comes a week after Cruz Gómez received “direct threats from State Security” for “supporting his wife Mildrey Betancourt in providing solidarity to a July 11th (11J) prisoner: the brave young man from Sancti Spiritus Luis Mario Niedas.”

Niedas, 31, sentenced to three years for demonstrating on July 11 in Sancti Spíritus, is in the Nieves Morejón prison, in the same province, and nothing is known about him at the moment.

According to sources from Sancti Spiritus activist Néstor Estévez, who lives in the United States, Niedas could be isolated in a punishment cell, although “there is no way to confirm this… I do attest that Luis Mario has not communicated with his family since January 23,” he certifies to 14ymedio. continue reading

That day, part of a telephone conversation between the young man from the prison and a friend residing in Canada in which he denounced his situation in prison was made public. “They invented excuses to put me under a severe regimen for alleged indiscipline that I did not commit,” said Niedas. The first of them, he referred to, “is that I did not want to be vaccinated and we already know that it is a right to receive a vaccine or not, it is a personal decision.” The second, he claimed, is to present his written defense “so that my lawyer would keep those papers and then give them to my family,” and the third, to speak from prison to Canada.

In these audios, Niedas names his friends Luis Ángel Cruz and Mildrey Betancourt, who were prevented from entering prison on January 5, “for a visit that belongs to me by right,” protests the young man. “They provide me with peace, joy, support, affection and emotional shelter, in short, they are important in my life,” says the young man, who also laments the threats received by his grandmother from State Security.

That same January 5 was the last time that the woman, who was allowed to visit, saw her grandson. “My closest family is under pressure and threats for the mere fact that I am an opponent,” Niedas cried. “They have made my aunt and my cousin not want to interact with the people who want to support me, thus keeping the opinion of the only two people who witnessed my trial a secret.”

In the same call, the prisoner recounted the conditions in which he was transferred to the prison after his trial, held on October 1, in which he was prosecuted for contempt, spread of epidemics and instigation to commit a crime. “For 14 days they kept me in a cell that was stuffy, so I had to bathe with my own urine and had feces on my feet and slept with that bad smell.”

When he complained to the responsible officer, he was transferred to another cell “which was supposedly fixed and in the same condition.” He kept complaining, without success. The objective, according to Niedas, is “to have me there all the time under that psychological abuse.”

The young man, in addition, according to Néstor Estévez, has been isolated in prison most of the time. “His grandmother and aunt and his cousin managed to see him on October 1, his grandmother did not manage to see him until January 5,” he tells this newspaper.

In his call, the prisoner also indicated that he had requested that Mildrey Betancourt be allowed to enter during the next scheduled visit, on February 7, but he anticipated that they will try to prevent it. “Is it ethical, humane, fair and morally acceptable that another person decides for me who I can see, hear and hug? Am I a terrorist or am I no longer a human being?” he asked.

Niedas was arrested on 11J, but before that he had already been harassed and pressured for being politically active. He himself detailed it in a chronicle published by Yucabyte days before that Sunday of protests. “My activism, like that of many, began from the pressures of the regime,” he wrote. “It was enough for me to support the causes defended by the San Isidro Movement and the 27N group on social networks for the weight of the arbitrariness of this dictatorship to fall on me.

“Because yes, publishing a simple post on Facebook in Cuba that does not have the approval of the Government, implies almost the same as standing with a sign in front of the headquarters of the provincial Communist Party (PCC) asking for the resignation of the president. There is no freedom, not even in cyberspace.”

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