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CUBA: Founder of Women in White Drops Out
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Miriam Leiva, one of the founders of the Cuban movement Women in White, announced Monday that she was leaving the group of wives, mothers and sisters of imprisoned dissidents to dedicate herself to "independent journalism."
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CUBA: Putting Their Houses in Order
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - In Cuba, when talk turns to the housing problem, the personal anecdotes that pour out are as large in number as the country's housing deficit, accumulated over years during which building efforts have not kept up with the need, while the existing houses and buildings continue to crumble.
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DEATH PENALTY-CUBA: Sentences Commuted But Treatment Still Harsh
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Prisoners in Cuba who were facing the death penalty but have had their sentences commuted to life imprisonment or 30 years in jail are still being treated like death row inmates, a dissident organisation complained on Tuesday.
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AGRICULTURE-CUBA: Fresh Produce for City-Dwellers
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Urban farming has taken off in Cuba over the last two decades, based on low-cost agro-ecological practices and a stable labour force, and could serve as a model for the rest of the agriculture sector in this period of reforms.
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HEALTH-CUBA: Lung Cancer Vaccine Available
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuba’s biotech industry plans to launch on the international market, in the short or medium term, a vaccine for treating lung cancer, which causes the deaths of over one million people a year worldwide.
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POLITICS-CUBA: Past, Present and Future Changes
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuba is paradoxically the same, yet not the same, under President Raúl Castro, who said he would change "everything that should be changed" to perfect the socialist path taken by the revolution nearly half a century ago.
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CUBA: Cautious Response to Lifting of EU Sanctions
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuba reacted cautiously to the announcement that the European Union would lift the diplomatic sanctions adopted after 75 dissidents received lengthy jail terms on charges of conspiring with Washington to destabilise the Cuban state, and three men convicted of hijacking a passenger ferry were executed, in 2003.
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CUBA: Don’t Worry, Be Ready - for Hurricanes
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Cuba has decided not to make public announcements of the overall outlook for the coming hurricane season, because it makes little practical difference to people’s lives and tends to create false apprehensions, said José Rubiera, regarded as this Caribbean country’s top expert on hurricanes.
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MIGRATION: More and More Cubans Entering US through Mexico
By Diego Cevallos
MEXICO CITY - The number of Cuban migrants intercepted in Mexico climbed from 254 in 2002 to 1,359 in 2007. And nearly 1,000 were detained in the first four months of this year alone -- the visible face of a people smuggling business that apparently operates in collusion with the police and other corrupt authorities.
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CUBA: Government Deports US Citizen Wanted for Child Sex Abuse
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - The Cuban government deported a U.S. citizen accused of sexually abusing a young girl in Costa Rica, less than two weeks after Washington included the Caribbean island on a list of countries that it says are not doing enough to combat child trafficking.
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CUBA: A City Drinks in Change
By Dalia Acosta
HOLGUÍN, Cuba - Afflicted for far too long by severe drought, which concentrated all minds on how to get water to entire communities of people, this eastern Cuban city seems at long last to be drinking its fill, and its appearance is completely different from what it looked like two or three years ago.
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RIGHTS-US: Mixed Appeals Verdict for "Cuban Five"
By Jonathan Springston
ATLANTA, Georgia - Activists plan to protest a federal appeals court ruling Wednesday to uphold the convictions of five Cuban intelligence agents accused of spying in the United States.
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POLITICS-US: Obama Draws Line on Cuba, Latin America Policy
By Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON - In a major policy address on U.S.-Latin American relations, the leading Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, pledged Friday to immediately roll back key sanctions imposed by President George W. Bush against Cuba over the last several years and called for a "new alliance of the Americas" in which Washington's southern neighbours would no longer be treated "as a junior partner".
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ECONOMY-CUBA: A New Model in the Making?
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Preparations for the sixth congress of Cuba’s ruling Communist Party (PCC), to be held in late 2009, may speed up the "structural changes" promised by President Raúl Castro and pave the way for a development strategy more suited to present conditions, experts say.
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CUBA: Officials Demand Explanations from US on Dissident Funds
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - The Cuban government demanded that the United States provide explanations for what it described as "obscure ties" between U.S. diplomatic personnel in Havana, "terrorist" groups in Miami and members of dissident organisations, in a case that has further heated up relations between the two countries.
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CUBA: Sexual Diversity - the Rainbow Revolution
By Dalia Acosta
HAVANA - Nearly 50 years after the triumph of the Cuban Revolution, sexual minorities are at last beginning to feel that their voice is being heard and that they can finally take their place in the movement towards a more just and inclusive society.
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ECONOMY-CUBA: Does the Ration Book Still Make Sense?
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Criticised as one more sign of the failures of socialism, or viewed as a right that should not be given up, the ration book, part of Cuban life for 46 years, could disappear as a result of the transformations needed in the country’s economy.
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LABOUR-CUBA: The Challenge of Boosting Productivity
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - Workers are facing thorny questions related to productivity, wages, participation in decision-making or unemployment at a time when the government is discreetly adopting measures aimed at finally pulling the country out of an economic crisis that has dragged on for more than 15 years.
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CUBA: Government Toughens Stance Against Dissidents
By Patricia Grogg
HAVANA - The break-up of a demonstration by a small group of Cuban women demanding the release of their imprisoned dissident husbands came just a few days after a government warning that in Cuba there is no space for "subversion" or the dreams of "internal mercenaries."
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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.

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BOLIVIA: Businesses Take On the Green Challenge
PORTUGAL: Easing Food Safety Standards for Traditional Products
KENYA: Gathering Storm of Expectations in Nairobi Slum
AFRICA: Proving Ground For International Criminal Court?
HEALTH: Global Agenda Increasingly Disease-Driven
ZAMBIA: Mwanawasa Leaves Mixed Legacy
NICARAGUA: US Fourth Fleet Treads Fine Line
DEVELOPMENT: South Africa Beats Deadline on Water, Sanitation
SOUTH ASIA: Musharraf's Exit Leaves India Confused
AFGHANISTAN: Taliban Fill Power Void in Kabul?
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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.
more >>
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.
more >>
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.
more >>