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Posts from — October 2006

TRANSPORT MINISTER OUSTED

Cuba’s main government advisory body recommended the second ministerial cabinet change since Raul Castro assumed the interim presidency almost three months ago from his brother Fidel, who’s recovering from intestinal surgery, EFE said.The Politburo, a government advisory group presided by Raul Castro, recommended the ouster of Carlos Manuel Pazo as transport minister, EFE said, citing a statement in Communist Party’s official newspaper Granma. Jorge Luis Sierra will replace Pazo, EFE said. The move wasn’t reported on Granma’s Web site.

Cuba’s 31-member Council of State approved the appointment, Efe said. Public transportation was one of the Cuban industries that shrank most with the end of subsidies related to the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990s. Cuba has increased commercial ties with China in recent years to replace its aging vehicle, train and fluvial technologies, EFE said.

On Aug. 31, the Politburo appointed Ramiro Valdez y Menendez, 74, one of the leaders of the 1959 ouster of President Fulgencio Batista, as new communications and computers minister in replacement of Ignacio Gonzalez Plana. Fidel Castro, 80, Cuba’s leader since Jan. 1, 1959, underwent surgery and gave his brother Raul, 75, temporary control of the government on July 31.

Source: Bloomberg; EFE

Jorge Luis Sierra is the new Transportation Minister of Cuba, a change decided due to the importantance of the sector, Cuban government officials announced Friday.

Sierra, member of the Political Bureau of the Cuban Communist Party (PCC), substites Carlos Manuel Pazo. Before his appointment he was in the Secretariat of the political organization,

The decision to replace Pazo was adopted by the Council of State, on a proposal of the PCC Political Board (Poliburo) and attending the importance of the sector, the daily states.

Cuba is currently boosting a plan to revive transportation, and has carried out important investments in this first phase like the purchase of over one thousand Chinese buses, locomotives and other transportation means and parts.

Source: PL

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October 21, 2006   No Comments

FIXING TO FIGHT THE CUBAN CIVIL WAR

There are increasing indications that Fidel Castro is not going to return to power. His brother Raul has recently established close ties to nationalist elements in the Cuban Communist Party and in the Armed Forces. He has apparently played on suspicions that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’ wants to inherit Fidel’s mantle as the leader of radicalism in Latin America, and could take actions that would compromise Cuban security and independence.

More worrisome is the potential for civil war in Cuba once Fidel dies. Raul is pushing 80 himself, and lacks his brothers charisma. Raul is a disciplinarian, which may cause problems if he tries to get Cuba to “shape up” after Fidel dies. Unrest in Cuba resonates in the United States, which is only 150 kilometers a way. In Florida, a key state in national elections, the well organized Cuban-American minority is a political force to be reckoned with. And then there is also the problems that would accompany Cuban-Americans getting active involved in post-Fidel politics. Some Cuban-American leaders have made no secret of their eagerness to do this. So trying to figure out what Raul is up to is a pressing issue in the Pentagon, as it is elsewhere in Washington.

Source: Strategy Page

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October 12, 2006   No Comments

FIDEL CASTRO TERMINALLY ILL

Mexican newspaper, El Universal, claims from various independent sources that Fidel Castro suffers from pancreatic and colon cancer.

Developing…

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October 10, 2006   No Comments

CUBA: AN ECONOMIC TIGER IN THE CARRIBBEAN?

US President George W Bush and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan talked on Tuesday, September 19 about the possibility that Cuba “could once again be an economic tiger in the Caribbean”.

This information was revealed to news reporters at the Algonquin Hotel in New York by Mike Kozak, senior director for Democracy, Human Rights and International Organisations in the National Security Council.

According to Mr Kozak, “This was not a long, deep, analytical thing… But just that one of these days, if Cubans are able to make the kind of changes that they need to make, that it could once again be an economic tiger in the Caribbean”.

What are the kinds of changes that Cuba would have to make to become an economic tiger in the region? Crucial among these would be a move toward a market economy, trade expansion, increased productivity through better wages and salaries for workers, access by Cubans to capital, which they can use to invest in businesses, and more foreign direct investment.

And, a very important element in expanding trade and increasing foreign investment would be the lifting of the 45-year-old US trade embargo, and normalisation of relations between Cuba and the US.

Against this background, Cuba is not likely to become an economic tiger in the region anytime soon, unless there is a massive collapse of the governmental system and a swift kiss and make up period between Washington and Havana.

For the time being, the Cuban government can afford to continue its present economic and foreign policies, but as pressure increases in a post-Castro era, a rethink of these policies, including in its relationship with the US, is bound to come.

At the moment, increased investment and aid from Venezuela is helping to bolster the Cuban economy. So too, is investment from France, Spain, Canada and more recently China and India.
China is now Cuba’s third largest trading partner with a trade exchange of US$985 million in 2005. China has invested US$1 billion in Cuba’s nickel industry as well as tourism, transportation and telecommunications, and it intends to explore for oil. And, India’s state-owned ONGC Videsh has signed a production-sharing agreement with Cuba’s state oil company Cupet.

According to the economy and planning minister, Jose Luis Rodriguez, the Cuban economy grew by 12.5% in the first half of 2006 and he expects annual growth to exceed 10% for the second successive year.
He is adamant that Cuba’s policy towards market opening will not change.

But, there is pressure for change in Cuba now both within the country and from external forces. Cuba’s trading partners, Canada and the European Union (EU), have been urging greater respect for human rights, more room for dissent within the society and more individual freedom.

Meanwhile the US Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba, which is chaired by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, has called for US$80 million to be spent over two years to “increase support for Cuban civil society, expand international awareness, break the regime’s information blockade and continue developing assistance initiatives to help Cuban civil society realise a democratic transition”.

All these factors will play a part in determining the policies of a Cuban government in the not too distant future.
One of the scenarios that could play out is a normalisation of relations between Cuba and the US in the post-Castro era.
Should this happen, there will be ramifications for the rest of the Caribbean.

For example, the Caribbean’s quota of sugar exports to the US would have to be reduced to accommodate Cuban sugar, and this would adversely impact an industry that is already reeling from the reduction in prices being paid by the EU for sugar from the countries of the Caribbean Community and Common Market (Caricom).

Some trade experts in the Caribbean also fear that there could be a displacement of Caricom products such as rum, and they ponder what kind of favourable bilateral free trade agreement the US might work out with Cuba to gain influence on the economy. Equally, they are concerned about whether US assistance to Cuba would reduce aid to the rest of the Caribbean.

There is little doubt that if Cuba’s relationship with the US is normalised, Washington’s interest in the smaller Caribbean countries, which is already limited, will diminish even further. Apart from drug trafficking and illegal immigration, the Caricom countries would command little attention or resources from the US.

Therefore, that brief conversation between Kofi Annan and George W Bush about Cuba once again becoming an economic tiger in the region should not simply be dismissed. The implications for other Caribbean countries are worthy of careful study.

Responses to: ronaldsanders29@hotmail.com mailto:ronaldsanders29@hotmail.com

Sir Ronald Sanders is a business executive and former Caribbean diplomat

Source: The Jamaica Observer

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October 1, 2006   No Comments