Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Former President Carter visit to Havana

Jimmy Carter visited Havana last Monday in an effort to try to improve Cuba-US relations.

during his three day visit he said:
“I hope we can contribute to better relations between the two countries.”

A few years ago, and specially during Clinton's administration, the relations between US and Cuba were kind of getting better, or at least there were some dialogue between the two countries on how to get the relations better.  US keeps pushing for the human rights violations to stop and Cuba is pushing for the US to lift the embargo on the island so the economic situation can improve there. 
I liked the fact that a former US president is taking this issue under his wing and trying to at least be open for a conversation. 
Could more visits from higher political US figures to Cuba help improve the situation? What do you think?

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Fidel Castro--no longer IN CHARGE


Fidel Castro has been the president of Cuba since 1959 and he has been the head of the Cuba Comunist Party since 1965.  In 2006 he steped down from power and from being the first secretary of the party because of health problems.  He is 84 now, and recently has said that he does not plan to have those roles again, and stated that now his younger brother Raul is president and first secretary of the party. 
what does that mean to Cubans? What does that mean for Cuba? It this a step in the direction of democracy?  It could be, we'll have to wait and see. 
see the entire article on: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=134758708 published March 22, 2011.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Foreign Relations

Havana Cathedral (Minutes from where my house use to be when I lived in Habana) This is a huge turist place.


Foreign Relations in Cuba

Fidel Castro had it made when the Soviet Union was comunist.  Ever since the cold ward ended, Cuba has strugled to find countries to trade with and be friendly with and now finds itself isolated.  Right now, there are not that many that want to or can trade with Cuba.  Among the countries that trade with Cuba currently we find Spain.  "Cuba imports more goods from Spain (almost 13% of total imports) than from any other country" (infoplease.com).  Spain decided not to press the cuban government for improvement of the human rights in the island.  And of course Cuba has relations with North Korea, Iran and Venezuela among others with similiar political systems (basicaly countries that violate human righst as well, or have totalitariam governments). 
The trade embargo imposed by the United States does not make its easier for Cuba to find new trade partners, and ever since it was passed into law in 1992 and strengthened by Bill Clinton in 1999 it is even harder now for Cuba to have trade relations with any country in the world that cares to also trade with the United States.
The embargo is suppossed to press for a more democratic Cuba, but my question now days is Who is the embargo really hurting?  The people in the government in Cuba seem to be doing fine.  But how is the people, the everyday people really doing in Cuba.  Is it effective, is it accomplishing the original purpose?  I am not too sure, the human right violations in Cuba are increasing, not decreasing and the people are starving to death and the government is blaming it all in the embargo impossed by the US.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Fidel Castro...Who is this guy?

An enigma to most people, a monster to us cubans!!!

Castro was born on August 13, 1926 (August 13 is now like a national holiday in Cuba, when it should really be a day of sorrow :(  )
His father was a wealthy plantation owner and his mom was the house maid until his father's first wife died then Fidel's dad married his mom and changed Fidel's last name from Ruz to Castro.
At early age he showed a great identification with social rights and so he became a lawyer in the university of Havana.
what happened? In my opinion, greed, that's what happens.  Like in Animal Farm, he became the "pig".
His ideas made sense in the beggining, like the ideal of comunism does in paper, putting it into practice is an entire different story.

The good he did:                 
  • Free Education
  • Free medicine
  • Equality to all-electricity, housing, equal portions/rations of food, etc.
The BAD:
  • Free education only to those who are in the political party, if you don't agree with the comunist party of Cuba, forget of being anybody.  Free education, but the teachers are the worse paid in Cuba, there are no books, there are no materials really for kids to use in schools.  All education in Cuba at all levels are related to politics in most way, the endoctrination process starts at birth and reafirmed from kindergarden to College and forever.
  • Free medicine -Yeah!! Great!! When you go to a hospital, you have to bring everything for your stay including the sheets for your bed.  Be ready to share a room with at least 4 others, sometimes anestesia is not available (during a C-Section in 1988, my mom almost died because of the lack of anestesia).  You go to the pharmacy and sometimes you don't find aspirin.  BUT, if you go to a pharmacy for turists, you find everything you need and more ... and be ready to pay in dollars (the cuban average paid is the equivalent to $18 US dollars a month).
  • Equality - WHAT EQUALITY - starting with the fact that if you don't belong to the party and you don't agree with the politics YOU ARE NOT EQUAL, therefore they will put you down and erase you off the map if needed to.  Yes, electricity was stablished for all cubans when fidel took power, but now days, the electricity is taken off every day to most homes for long periods of time sometimes as much as for 4-6 hours at a time.  No water runs in any municipality in a daily basis.  Imagine not being able to flush the toilet or washing the dishes every day.
Ok, enough for today.  You can read more about his life and his accomplishments in the link I posted above.

Fidel Castro Biography - Biography.com

Fidel Castro Biography - Biography.com

Cuban Political System

Did you know that Fidel Castro is the longest serving head of government who has held the premier postiion in the government and politics of Cuba since 1976?  Well in fact he has been in power since January 1, 1959.  That seems like a very long time, almost two generations now of cubans that has not known a different president than the Castros.

Like in China, there is only one political party in Cuba, the Comunis Party of Cuba, which is the only and oldest party does not allow any other party or opposition at all.  You can only imagine what is done to the opposition in a country like Cuba, torture, jail, death.
Cuban Political Map
In Cuba like in China, elections are held, but the people really only vote for their local representatives.  Cuba is divided into 14 provinces  with a total of 165 municipalities.  People in cuba vote for their local municiality representative, this happens every two years and a half.



As I remember as a little girl, election time was a big deal in Cuba.  Everybody was involved (even those who didn't support the government), even kids where involved.  We, the kids, were sent to the voting places to gurd the votes.  One kid with their school uniforms in each side of the "voting box" to gurd it.  Everything was a symbol, a way to indoctrinate the kids from an early age.  Hypocrecy by the government to hold elections, when in fact, at the end of the day only one name was in the presidential valot. 
As we learned in our class about China, Cuba is a lot like that.  If people didn't join this hyprotical event "elections" they could face terrible consecuences.