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CUBA: Human Rights at the Eye of the Storm
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuba stepped up its state-controlled media offensive Monday in response to what the government calls a well-orchestrated international campaign of misinformation carried out in the last few weeks against this socialist island nation.
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RIGHTS-CUBA: Hunger Striker Refuses to Go into Exile
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - The state news media in Cuba reported Monday on the case of dissident Guillermo Fariñas, who has been on a hunger strike for 13 days and refuses to go into exile in Spain.
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CUBA: A Good Old Age in Old Havana
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - In the centre of Old Havana, historic buildings are being restored without neglecting the occupants who are their heart and soul. The priority is to care for elderly residents with programmes that could become a model for the rest of Cuba, whose population is ageing fast.
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LATIN AMERICA: Subdued Response to Cuban Dissident's Death
By Humberto Márquez
CARACAS - The deafening silence of Latin American governments has fallen like another shovelful of earth on the grave of Cuban dissident Orlando Zapata, a bricklayer who died Feb. 23 after nearly three months on hunger strike in prison on the Caribbean island.
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RIGHTS-CUBA: Dissidents Bid Final Farewell to Hunger Striker
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Several dozen anti-government opponents gathered Wednesday at the headquarters of the Ladies in White, a Cuban dissident group, in the capital, to hold a "symbolic wake" for Orlando Zapata, a political prisoner who died on the 85th day of a hunger strike.
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CUBA: Women Knitting for Change
By Dalia Acosta
HAVANA - A neighbour started calling Andrea del Sol "Perseverance," and the name stuck. Since 1998, she and a small group of women from Alamar, on the outskirts of the Cuban capital, have been throwing their combined energies behind a common purpose: "changing things."
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Q&A: "Being Poor and White Is Not the Same as Being Poor and Black" in Cuba
Patricia Grogg interviews University of Havana researcher ESTEBAN MORALES
HAVANA - The elimination of racism remains unfinished business in Cuba today. "We have to admit that the problem exists, determine its impact on the social model that we defend, and tackle it in depth," says Esteban Morales, an Afro-Cuban economist, political scientist and author of numerous articles and essays on the subject.
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CUBA: Wendy - Reconciling the Inner and Outer Image
By Dalia Acosta
HAVANA - It was as if she had only closed her eyes for a moment. When Wendy Iriepa came round after surgery over a year ago, she tried to get up as if nothing had happened, but a nurse gently pushed her back into bed. "All done?" she asked, and the nurse replied, "Yes."
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ARTS: Cuban Musicians Resuming U.S. Performances
By Roque Planas*
NEW YORK - New York City recently hosted its first Cuban band in five years, after the group Septeto Nacional became the first to win a visa that allowed it to accept a booking there.
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CUBA-US: Stuck at a Standstill
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Relations between Cuba and the United States are still bogged down in longstanding political and ideological differences, in spite of the signals of greater openness and opportunities for dialogue when Democratic U.S. President Barack Obama arrived at the White House.
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CLIMATE CHANGE-CUBA: "Energy is an Instrument of Power"
By Daniela Estrada - IPS/Terraviva*
COPENHAGEN - "Energy is an instrument of power. Whoever has energy, controls the world," Cuban expert Luis Bérriz said in an address to Klimaforum, the civil society meeting being held in parallel to the UN conference on climate change in the Danish capital.
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CUBA: World Class Pharma that Puts People First
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuban biotechnology and pharmaceutical products are already among the country's major exports, and the industry is on course to continue developing while maintaining a firm focus on making a real difference to the health of all Cubans and of people in the numerous countries where Cuba provides medical assistance.
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CUBA: Dissidents' Plight Unchanged Under Raul, Charges HRW
By Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON - While Cuban President Raul Castro has implemented some economic and administrative reforms, his three-year-old government has continued to isolate and persecute political dissidents, according to a major new report released here Wednesday by Human Rights Watch (HRW).
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CUBA: Fewer Storks Visiting Shiny Maternity Clinics
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Women in Cuba cite a variety of reasons to explain their decision to have only one child, ranging from the housing shortage to the rising cost of living and the many work responsibilities they have to shoulder. But many say that if things were different they would have a bigger family.
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CUBA: Food Security Focus of New UN Programmes
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Three new international cooperation agreements channeled through the United Nations system in Cuba are aimed at strengthening food security, especially in the poorest parts of the country.
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POLITICS: U.S. Blasted for Sustaining Embargo on Cuba
By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS - The administration of President Barack Obama, which has vowed to improve relations with sanctions-hit Cuba, refused to break away from the traditional stand taken by successive U.S. governments and voted against a U.N. resolution calling for an end to the 47-year-old U.S. economic, commercial and financial embargo against the Caribbean island nation.
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ECONOMY-CUBA: Cutting Subsidies to Balance the Budget
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuban President Raúl Castro is willing to risk unpopular measures to free the state from its excessive burden of subsidies and for-free services, as part of a programme to adjust public expenditure to shrunken government revenues and balance the budget.
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CUBA-US: Mixed Messages
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - While the Cuban government has intensified its protests against the U.S. embargo, typically hostile signals between the two nations have been mixed with hints of a more relaxed tone since U.S. President Barack Obama took office.
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CUBA: Raising an Environmentally Conscious Generation
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Every summer in Cuba, the complaint is heard over and over again: "These beaches are filthy!" Empty beer and soft drink bottles, plastic bags and cups, the remains of someone's picnic lunch, and innumerable cigarette butts are strewn on the sand every day, despite the threat of fines and the pleas of ecologists.
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Cuban President Fidel Castro resigned his post at the helm of the Caribbean island nation's socialist government on Feb. 19, 2008. Rumours had been flying about the state of his health ever since he delegated his powers to his brother Raúl in July 2006. Castro lives with the certainty that few figures will ever match his influence during their lifetimes, and few will have stirred such diverse passions: the support of many citizens who haven't forgotten what Cuba was like before he took power in 1959, the enthusiasm of the political left in the 1960s and 1970s, and the hatred of the tens of thousands of Cubans who fled into exile. At stake is the viability of the system that imprisoned dozens of dissidents and which has survived the hostility of the world's superpower and its closest neighbour, the United States. The saga continues to unfold while Havana seeks links with a new wave of leftist governments in Latin America that nevertheless are following a different path -- that of democracy.

News in RSS
POLITICS-SRI LANKA: Scepticism Greets Human Rights Plan
CHINA: State Media Pushing for a Global Voice
EAST AFRICA: Impatient EU Pushes for Progress on EPA Trade Deal
RIGHTS: JSOC Interests Snag Plan to Free Afghan Detainees
POLITICS-NEPAL: Statesman’s Death Leaves Worries About Peace Process
POLITICS-SUDAN: African Leaders Call for Peaceful Elections
ECONOMY: Greek Crisis Impacts the Balkans
U.S.: Families Sue Over Guantanamo Deaths
NIGERIA: Acting President Consolidates Power Amid Unrest
CLIMATE CHANGE: A Year On, Little Change in Political Climate
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CUBA: HEAT AND SCEPTICISM
By Leonardo Padura Fuentes
Whether they hope for the materialisation of certain wishes or are convinced of certain disappointment, a day looms in the near future for Cuban: July 26, anniversary of the beginning of the armed struggle of Fidel Castro and his followers in 1953, writes Leonardo Padura Fuentes, a Cuban writer and journalist whose novels have been translated into a dozen languages.
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DIVERSITY IN CUBA
By Leonardo Padura Fuentes
Just 30 years ago, being homosexual in Cuba could be enough to incur the punishment of interruption of university study or expulsion from a job that involved contact with "the public", writes Leonardo Padura Fuentes, a Cuban writer and journalist whose novels have been translated into a dozen languages.
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CUBA SAYS GOODBYE TO THE 20TH CENTURY
By Leonardo Padura Fuentes
Recent confirmation that Cuban citizens living in Cuba can finally have their own cell phones and buy computers, microwave ovens, and DVD players with the local currency in local stores has provoked amazement among the less informed and an ironic chuckle among those familiar with the complex multiple realities of this Caribbean island, writes Leonardo Padura Fuentes, a Cuban writer and journalist whose novels have been translated into 10 languages.
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WINDS OF CHANGE BLOW IN CUBA
By Leonardo Padura Fuentes
Two significant events have occurred since the formation of Cuba's new government on February 24 and suggest a shift in the country's politics, writes Leonardo Padura Fuentes, a Cuban writer and journalist whose novels have been translated into 10 languages. His most recent work, "La nieblina de ayer", won the Hammett Prize for the best crime novel written in Spanish for 2005.
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AN OPENING OF DISCUSSION WITHIN CUBA
By Aurelio Alonso
The speech of acting president Raul Castro on June 26 was followed by a call for open discussion, which reignited the debate over the errors of the past and reflection on how to address them, from shortages and domestic difficulties to ideas about political, economic, and social projections, writes Aurelio Alonso, a Cuban sociologist and vice director of the magazine Casa de las Americas.
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CUBA: TO CHANGE OR NOT TO CHANGE
By Leonardo Padura Fuentes
The mystery novel into which Cuban life has been transformed has entered a climactic phase of its development. In the upcoming chapters we may find evidence regarding the question we are asking: Will Cuba change or not? writes Leonardo Padura Fuentes, a Cuban author and journalist whose novels have been translated into a dozen languages.
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