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Archive for the ‘Cuba’ Category

Obama Lightens Up on Cuba

5:24 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Cuba|Latin America|Politics · Comments Off

12 Mar 2009

Much to the chagrin of right-wing Cuban Americans, President Obama is moving towards a more open relationship with Cuba after 40 years of abysmal dealings between the two countries. He’s not lifting the embargo just yet (I fear riots might break out in Miami should that ever happen) but he is lightening restrictions on visits to the island by those Cuban Americans who have family there. 5 years after restrictions were enacted by Bush, Obama’s shaking things up a bit, allowing those with family in Cuba to visit the island once a year for as long as they choose.

In its 2009 budget bill, Congress took away the U.S. Department of Treasury’s funding for enforcement of more restrictive rules that only allowed visits to immediate relatives once every three years.

That meant the trips were still illegal — but the U.S. government did not have the funding to investigate it.

On Wednesday night, the Treasury department lifted the restrictions all together, making annual trips to Cuba legal. A rule posted on the Office of Foreign Assets Control’s web site shows Cuban Americans can now follow the regulations that existed prior to Bush’s June 2004 toughened rules.

The rollback also means people can visit more distant relatives, including those by marriage.

While this isn’t the extent to which I wish things would happen in U.S.-Cuba relations, it is a step ahead which I personally applaud. Havana, however, has remained — uncharacteristically — tight-lipped on this new development, which also includes a hike in the amount of money can be sent back to Cuba by Cuban Americans, which was previously limited to $100 per month.

Meanwhile, not everyone is happy.

Via / Miami Herald

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A Russian neighbor last night asked me in the street, “What are you? Are you Spanish?”
I shook my head and said, “No, my family is Puerto Rican.”
“So not European?”
“No, Caribbean”
” So you don’t celebrate International Women’s Day?”
“Of course I do”
and we proceeded to congratulate each other on being women.

Yesterday was International Women’s Day and Latin American Women celebrated all we do and continue to do around the world.

The Chilean Planning Ministry is venturing online for their Women’s Day Campaign, and for today, they bring us a poem read by several women. The poem is Ode to the Washerwoman by Pablo Neruda, which paints us the image of a woman washing laundry for a living at night, with a lit candle and the moon as company:

La nocturna
lavandera
a veces
levantaba
la cabeza
y ardían en su pelo
las estrellas
porque
la sombra
confundía
su cabeza
y era la noche, el cielo
de la noche
la cabellera
de la lavandera,
y su vela
un astro
diminuto
que encendía
sus manos
que alzaban
y movían
la ropa,
subiendo
descendiendo,
enarbolando
el aire, el agua,
el jabón vivo,
la magnética espuma.

I’m curious as to why a poem by Gabriela Mistral, the first mujer Latin American Nobel Prize winner, wasn’t used.

In Peru, women members of the Colective Canto a la Vida marched in Lima, demanding the respect of women’s rights as well as sexual and reproductive rights: the right to therapeutic abortions, against forced sterilizations and for access to the Day After Pill.

In Cuba, the 8th Congress of the Federation of Cuban Women (FMC) is held a discussion on the organization”s daily and international work and female presence in the country”s economic life.

Latina Lista featured the words of Latin American women confronting violence in their lives.

How did you celebrate International Women’s Day yesterday?

Via / Global Voices Online, Inteligentaindigena Novajoservo/The Intelligent Aboriginal News Service

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Twitterputeando : Can you spot the racism and ablism in this anti-twitter piece (of mierda).

Latin America: Venezuela is not the enemy.

Today’s Menu: Frozen Mangu

Shopping : Is Walmart coming to my city (ay por favor no).

Racism : NYPD is racial profiling? Shock!

Musica: Mujeres of Jazz Cubano

Politica : Obama keep saying in Spanish he care about immigration. I’m waiting in English.

Feliz Saturday!

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Sunday Brunch Links

8:37 am By Maegan La Mala · Controversia|Cuba|Immigration|Linking Latinos|Quicklinks · Comments Off

8 Feb 2009

I’ve been way off my game this week and am trying to come back. Mientras tanto, peep what I’m reading/watching this lovely domingo morning:

Shock! Fidel Castro criticizes Obama. Guess he’s not dead yet.

Miley Cyrus may have been nominated for a Kid’s Choice Award, pero she’s still racist.

And, amigo Nezua reminds us of how the land of the free applies to a very specific group of people, not including locked up immigrants.

Feliz Sunday. It’s beautiful out, at least here in NYC it is, so get outside into the sun. She’s missed you.

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castroobama.jpgAbsent Cuban president Fidel Castro, ever wiling to say what’s on his mind in his weekly essays, said what might be the first kind words ever uttered about a U.S. president. But he didn’t write down his first impressions of Barack Obama; instead he leaked them to Argentine president Cristina Kirchner at a meeting between the two yesterday. You might want to sit down before you read on because this is pretty incredible:

Mrs Fernandez said: “Fidel believes in Obama. He told me he had followed the inauguration of Barack Obama very closely, that he had watched the inauguration on television all day.

“He had a very good perception of President Obama.”

The Argentine premier said Mr Castro called Mr Obama “a man who seems absolutely sincere, who believes strongly in his ideas and who hopefully can carry them out”.

Read more…

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obama_emanuel_012109.jpgYesterday, I wrote how President Obama suspended some trials of Guantanamo Bay prisoners. Obama will signed executive orders not just shutting down Gitmo within a year, but also other U.S. secret prisons globally.

Some polls are showing mixed public reaction to the expected undoing of Bush detention policies. My question is why? If the United States really wants to clean up it’s global image then it needs to get rid of these centers that amount to torture camps and function outside the rule of law that so many are fond of talking about.

I’m still waiting for Obama to call for a suspension to ICE raids.

Via / NYT

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gitmo.jpgThe new Obama administration is making some positive moves already. President Obama ordered military prosecutors in the Guantanamo war crimes tribunals to ask for a 120-day halt in all pending cases and a judge granted the request on Wednesday in the case against a young Canadian.

When defense lawyers did not oppose the move, a judge froze the proceedings against Canadian Omar Khadr, who was captured at age 15 and is accused of murdering a U.S. soldier with a grenade during a firefight in Afghanistan.

Also potentially impacted is the death penalty case against five prisoners accused of plotting the September 11th 2001 plane attacks.

Via / Yahoo! and The Latin Americanist

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hugo-chavezxx.jpgPresident-elect Obama’s openness to sit down with the leaders of countries the Bush administration has either alienated or straight out offended — a campaign trail promise and a point in his favor over opponent Hillary Clinton — will soon be put to the test.

The Castros of Cuba appear to be willing to reciprocate, but there is still some doubt about the willingness of Fidel’s BFF, Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, who has said that Obama is no different than the Republicans in “attacking” his country.

One Venezuelan diplomacy scholar, María Teresa Romero of the Central University of Venezuela, agrees that the ball is pretty much in Chavez’s court, and isn’t very hopeful about future U.S.-Venezuela relations:

“This is, or should be, a moment of change for Hugo Chavez, but I don’t think that will happen. He might do it with words, but will end up fighting again, having impasses with the U.S., because unfortunately so-called revolutionary and radical leftist regimens always need to have an enemy to confront and an anti-imperialist rhetoric.”

Read more…

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Cuba Celebrates 50th Anniversary of “La Revolución”

6:59 am By Maegan La Mala · Cuba|history · Comments Off

2 Jan 2009

castro-time.jpgOn New Year’s Day, 1959 Fidel Castro and his band of Revolutionary Directorate rebels defeated General Fulgencio Batista’s forces and led his country towards a revolution. Few thought it would hold, but here we are some 50 years later, and Castro’s revolutionary ideal for Cuba is still going, if not strong, along.

While the rest of the world was congratulating each other on the New Year, Fidel was congratulating his countrymen on the longevity of his ideals:

“Upon the 50th anniversary of the triumph, I congratulate our heroic countrymen,” said Castro, 82, in a brief note dated Wednesday afternoon and published in on the cover of Granma, the Communist party’s newspaper.

Lacking a non-generic comment from Fidel or anything of substance from Raul on the future of the revolution, we turn to Mariela, Raul’s daughter, the most outspoken member of the family. Check out what she has to say in the video after the jump.

Read more…

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_45336471_081230_cuba_b1.jpgSpain announced last week the opportunity for mass nationalization of the grandchildren of Spanish citizens who were forced to flee to Cuba during the Spanish Civil War, and the response from Cubans fitting this description has been overwhelming.

Cuban cardiologist Norberto Díaz Reyes will be a Spaniard in 15 days. And he hopes to be in the “madre patria” in less than 3 months. “I always wanted to return to my grandparents’ country. I would like to live and work in Spain for many years”, he says, with a smile wider than the Havana harbor. Norberto, 38, was the first person in his country to take advantage of the so-called “Grandchildren Law”, part of the “Historial Memory Law”, which, starting yesterday and lasting for two years, will let some 150,000 Cuban descendents of emigrants and exiles, obtain Spanish citizenship.

150,000 may not sound like a lot, but that’s only a fraction of what the Spanish government is expecting. In looking at data, it appears that there should be a lot more people on their way to the Spanish consulate in Havana: in just the first third of the last century, over one million Spaniards had emigrated to Cuba. Another piece of data is that in 1905 there were over 100,000 Spaniards from Galicia — just one region of Spain – living on the island. These numbers point to a possible avalanche of petitions for citizenship, and the Spanish consulate has hired an extra 35 people just to deal with all of them.

El País reports that some people waiting in line (for days, some for weeks and months)could care less about living in Spain; what they want is a European passport so they can get to Miami.

Similar lines are forming outside of consulates around Latin America, such as the one in Buenos Aires, where the Spanish government has hired 150 extra employees to handle the demand.

Via / El País

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