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Revolution

DIDO | 24.04.2003 10:38

The once-muscular Cuban economy is in tatters and its much lauded social safety net a cruel joke. In Cuba, the poor are bled to support the lifestyles of the government elite, which lives in luxury - the driveways of the Havana honchos sport Mercedes - while its populace goes hungry.

"Can I have your bones?" the old woman asked my eight-year-old daughter, pointing to the gnawed remains of the chicken leg that had been her lunch. Seeing that my daughter was perplexed, the old woman displayed a box of chicken bones that she had collected from other customers at the lunch counter of the department store, a respectable establishment frequented by locals in Old Havana's main shopping street. My daughter provided the bones after the lunch counter staff gave its consent - the old woman was evidently a regular at the lunch counter, and this was how she earned her supper.


Welcome to Cuba, 44 years into the Revolution that was to industrialize the economy, eradicate hunger and eliminate the gap between rich and poor in this island nation, previously the most prosperous in the Caribbean. Today, the once-muscular Cuban economy is in tatters and its much lauded social safety net a cruel joke. The poor, in reality, are bled to support the lifestyles of the government elite, which lives in luxury - the driveways of the Havana honchos sport Mercedes - while its populace goes hungry.

Some Cubans outside government - increasingly those who obtain patronage positions in the tourist industry, where they receive tips and other payments in U.S. dollars - manage comfortable, if meagre, existences. With dollars, they can shop in the many "dollar" shops, where they can obtain some of the consumer goods, medicines and dairy products that most Cubans, prior to the Revolution, could readily obtain.

The great majority of Cubans, however, are left to fend for themselves in a pitiless system. Most must "do business" to survive, as Cubans put it, because most cannot subsist on the typical wages - the equivalent of about 50 cents a day - that the government sets for them. The old woman at the lunch counter begged for food; other Cubans beg for old clothes or for medicine, or sell peanuts on street corners. Young men sell cigars and other goods in the burgeoning black market; young women sell their bodies in the burgeoning sex trade.

Without dollars, life is grim. People line up at dimly lit government distribution centres, ration books in hand - libretas, the government calls them - for their monthly allocation. The books, which were established in 1962 to "guarantee the equitable distribution of food without privileges for a few," entitle Cubans to 2.5 kilograms of rice, 1 kilogram of fish, 1/2 kilogram of beans, 14 eggs and sundry other basics at subsidized prices. Through the libreta, each Cuban also gets one bread roll a day. Every two months, a Cuban is entitled to one bar of hand soap and one bar of laundry soap. Fresh fruits and vegetables come infrequently; meat might come once or twice a year. Until the mid-1990s, children under seven were entitled to fresh milk, but fresh milk, like butter, cheese and other dairy products, is now off the shelves. Before the revolution, two litres of fresh milk cost 15 U.S. cents, well within the means of the poor.

Cuba, a country with a coffee culture, produces fine beans in its Oriente province, but not for average Cubans. The good stuff is sold to tourists and exported to earn dollars, or reserved for the Cuban elite, while the government imports cheaper beans, grinds them, mixes them with ground chickpeas, and doles out 28 grams per month - less than one ounce - to Cuban citizens. The government also exports high quality Cuban rice for dollars while importing a low-grade rice from Vietnam for its citizens. It exports 90% of its fresh fruits, directing much of the rest to tourists and others who can pay in dollars.

Nowhere in the world does the Almighty Buck more separate the haves from the have-nots. The Cuban government has adopted the U.S. dollar as an official currency that co-exists along with the peso and cleverly keeps the poor in their place. The multinationals operating in the country - Cuba now courts them to earn dollars - are forbidden to pay their Cuban workers directly in dollars. Instead, they must turn over the workers' wages to a government agency which pockets most of the money and gives the workers a pittance in pesos. Cuba's communists have perfected the Double Currency Standard, and the double standard: One currency for the rich, another for the poor, and the rich determine the means of exchange.

Cuba's poor are also squeezed in the other necessities of life. Even in central Havana, people commonly carry water by bucket from standpipes in the street to their homes, and then lift the buckets by rope to the higher floors, because their buildings' broken water pipes go unrepaired. Those lucky enough to have working water pipes can get water at the tap - but only at certain times. In one dense urban neighbourhood that I visited, the water flowed from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., during which time families scrambled to fill pots and pans inside their homes for drinking water, and former oil drums outside their homes for washing. About the time that the water came on, the electricity went off - it, too, is rationed by daily blackouts.

In buildings where one or two families might have once lived, today live many. The inner courtyards of Cuba's residences have become miniature shanty towns, cinder block housing units or other improvisations piled on top of one another. The units - often two small rooms totalling 200 square feet - can house an extended family of seven, 10 or even 12. The rooms are often windowless or near-windowless, the ceilings low and oppressive. Among these buildings packed with people lie many identical buildings, but appropriated for government use. In the space that might house 50 or 100 people will sit one government functionary, bored and idle at a desk, the premises otherwise near-empty.

"For the first time in the history of our country, both the state and the government left aside the rich side and joined the poor side," Fidel Castro proclaimed after assuming power in 1959. Forty-four years after the Revolution, the poor side are talking of another revolution, in which the government will do much, much more for its people by doing much, much less.

DIDO

Comments

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funny enough

24.04.2003 10:48

Without reading through the whole article ...on the chicken bone story ...I am reminded of a similar experience in Kenya.
I witnessed it.

The funny part is Kenya is not under a sanction.
Also I do nto think this symptom of poverty has anything to do with Cuba or Kenya.... There is a cause as there is plenty of food.
Only yesterday there was a surplus milk stock destroyed in Devon....few miles away from airbases where hercules land.

Ah! If the country is alien in politics modified B52 will do a better job of dropping food.

ram


REVOLUTION

24.04.2003 14:22

Having visited Havana with in the past year, I can confirm that the poverty in the Cuban capital rife, especially in Cerro and La Habana Vieja. But in my opinion it would be wrong to say that "all" Cubans, except the "elite" live in poverty, quite the contrary.

There is a strange phenomena in Havana, sceptics had told me that "everything would be the same," "they'll all drive the same car and live in identical houses" and as dido puts they are all be poor, living in tiny squalid houses, stacked up on top of one another, they are all the same, poor beggars scrounging for food.

But if ever you visit Havana, try walking from Plaza De La Revolution to Nouvo Vedaro, the route will take you through a variety of residential areas, ranging from popular housing, spanish colonial housing, low rise shacks and semi-detached suburban houses. Yes, even in communist Cuba there is a diverse class system. The peopled have devoloped a whole maner of skills to survive, services to sell you or advice to give you.

Yes, Cuba is poor, yes people in Cuba are pissed with being poor (and Castro to an extent) but the biggest omission from dido's article is the reason for Cuba's economy being in tatters, sanctions.

You could believe these sceptics who will try and twist the facts against socialism, but the truth about Cuba's poverty is that it was forced on them, not by communists, but capitalist sanctions, put on their country because the cubans didn't want their brand name clothes or their one size fits all health insurance.

Cuba's culture is slowly being destroyed by sanctions, but the yet the safety net still excised. Whilst visiting the States a month before going to Cuba, I saw hundreds of people sleeping rough on the streets of New York and Washington and there were beggars on almost every street corner. Yet in the three weeks I was in Cuba, I only had one person begged me for money and the only person I saw sleeping on the street was a drunk Danish tourist.

It is nothing but American sanctions that is killing Cuba, and I have one thing to say them, "America get your own ship in order before tell us what to with ours."

antbody


4 antbody

24.04.2003 16:34

Who was smiling more when you visited them?

The US pigs or the Cuban humans?

Also have I have heard positive things about the Cuban health system. Do you know what happens to you in the states if you do not have a health insurace?

I am no fan of biotech but the Cubans have a 'third world' friendly biotech industry catering to real needs (obviously to the best of their abilities) than the piggy ones who hide behind global hegemony bu the pigs.

ram


get real

24.04.2003 16:55

While it is true Cuba is poor and the sanctions has some part to play in it, the question which you should ask yourself is why the west is ony materialy rich? Even that richness what is the source of it?

That richness is built on sucking the blood of other nations. While technologicaly; the West has been advanced in only for the last 300 years or so; first this advance had been employed to destroy other nations in more than one way. It is not just in military means but look at the Western universityies, overseas student are led and even made to study postgraduate topics which have no value other than academic values. The effects of military action is all too clear in Iraq through the destruction of its defences and then the imposetion of its own(west) will so that the sucking of the Iraqi and the others resources to continue. The others being the Gulf "States".

So imagine the visibale and the invisbale sucking. Add to that the inflated values of the dollar and in Iraq case we use to sell our oil in the EURO so not just Cuba and Iraq (Iraq was helping Cuba) but even Europe is going to be effected. But because of the latter being partners in this blood sucking and being white they will not be hurt that much.

If the West is being inhabited by humans none of this suffering would have happened and in particular here the author of the article criticising Cuba, rather than just repeating what has been wrtten again and agin will just sit and think if he/she had more than he/she needs why not give to who needs it. This if thinking why I am rich and he is poor is too much for him/her.

jaafer


GET REAL

24.04.2003 16:59



While it is true Cuba is poor and the sanctions has some part to play in it, the question which you should ask yourself is why the west is ony materialy rich? Even that richness what is the source of it?

That richness is built on sucking the blood of other nations. While technologicaly; the West has been advanced in only for the last 300 years or so; first this advance had been employed to destroy other nations in more than one way. It is not just in military means but look at the Western universityies, overseas student are led and even made to study postgraduate topics which have no value other than academic values. The effects of military action is all too clear in Iraq through the destruction of its defences and then the imposetion of its own(west) will so that the sucking of the Iraqi and the others resources to continue. The others being the Gulf "States".

So imagine the visibale and the invisbale sucking. Add to that the inflated values of the dollar and in Iraq case we use to sell our oil in the EURO so not just Cuba and Iraq (Iraq was helping Cuba) but even Europe is going to be effected. But because of the latter being partners in this blood sucking and being white they will not be hurt that much.

If the West is being inhabited by humans none of this suffering would have happened and in particular here the author of the article criticising Cuba, rather than just repeating what has been wrtten again and agin will just sit and think if he/she had more than he/she needs why not give to who needs it. This if thinking why I am rich and he is poor is too much for him/her.

JAAFER
mail e-mail: JAFER@HOTMAIL.COM


Poverty

24.04.2003 17:12

Yes Jaffer i think I understand and agree with most of what you are saying.

Infact :-) I am one very vociferous about what you point out as 'if the west was inhabited by humans'... type of thinking.

Keep it up. I sued to summarise this as WHite pigs but a lot of children got pissed off. So I am thinking of Using McPig.

In cuba there are no McPigs except the agents of darkness (very few) and the Pigs camped in the bay of Pigs (Guantanomo).

ram