Tag: Cuba

  • Akufo-Addo once rescued stranded Ghanaians in Cuba – Rev Eastwood Anaba

    Akufo-Addo once rescued stranded Ghanaians in Cuba – Rev Eastwood Anaba

    A video featuring founder of Eastwood Anaba Ministries, Reverend Eastwood Anaba, has surfaced online, recounting how President Akufo-Addo facilitated the repatriation of stranded Ghanaians from Cuba during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.

    In the video, shared on TikTok, Reverend Eastwood Anaba narrates how he learned of the situation while hosting the Shepherd’s Summit at the National Theatre.

    Upon hearing the news, he decided to seek the assistance of the president.

    Despite skepticism from others that gaining the president’s attention would be challenging, Reverend Anaba proceeded to the Jubilee House, where he was warmly received and granted an audience with President Akufo-Addo.

    Reverend Anaba recalled, “Somebody was sick in Cuba and went for treatment and had to come back home. This was just before COVID-19. I was doing Shepherd’s Summit at the National Theatre. I got up and said, ‘Let me go and meet President Nana Addo Dankwah Akufo-Addo.’”

    He continued, “People told me, ‘Hey, the President will not mind you,’ but I went to the Jubilee House. And when I went, they said, ‘Reverend, you are welcome.’ I said I was coming to see the big man; they asked me, ‘Do you have an appointment with him?’ I said, ‘No, it’s an emergency.’ They said, ‘Okay, we’ll tell him you are here.’ I sat down for a few minutes. Afterwards, they came and said, ‘He said you can come.’”

    During their meeting, Reverend Anaba expressed his concerns to President Akufo-Addo, who attentively listened and assured him that the matter would be addressed.

    As promised, within a few weeks, the individuals stranded in Cuba were safely repatriated to Ghana.

    Reverend Anaba recounted, “I told him there is somebody I know, a Ghanaian who is in Cuba with other people. They are sick. They have to come home. He looked at me, wrote it down, and said, ‘Osofo Panyin, it shall be done.’ Within a few weeks, they had been brought back from Cuba to Ghana.”

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  • Ghana and Cuba mark 64 years of diplomatic ties

    Ghana and Cuba mark 64 years of diplomatic ties

    Cuba and Ghana marked the 64th anniversary of their diplomatic relations, commemorating Cuba’s National Day.

    The diplomatic ties were initiated on December 23, 1959, with Ghana being the first Sub-Saharan African nation to establish relations with Revolutionary Cuba.

    The foundation of this relationship was laid by the visionary leader Dr. Kwame Nkrumah and Commander Fidel Castro Ruz, fostering brotherhood ties and mutual cooperation.

    Ghana has consistently supported Cuba in international matters, condemning the U.S. blockade and illegal sanctions imposed by Donald Trump during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The celebration highlighted the deep cultural and historical ties between the two nations, emphasizing principles of South-South and Pan-Africanist cooperation.

    Ambassador Anette Chao Garcia expressed gratitude for Ghana’s support and highlighted the enduring partnership, spanning various sectors like medicine, sports, education, and more.

    She emphasized Cuba’s willingness to resume and expand collaboration in multiple areas.

    The Minister for Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, acknowledged the profound relationship, noting its growth despite challenges.

    “We gave ourselves to Africa with many of our children who fought for independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity and the training of human resources.”

    “In these 64 years, Cuba has collaborated in the medical sector, at this time, with 28 specialists from a Medical Brigade; Likewise, we had offered collaboration in sports, education and in the application of biolarvicides to combat the mosquito that transmits Malaria,” she added. 

    The healthcare sector emerged as a key collaboration, with Cuban specialists supporting Ghana’s health system. Political consultations, facilitated through joint commissions, have addressed diverse issues, promoting mutual goals and enhancing citizens’ well-being.

  • Fuel prices in Cuba to rise by more than 500%

    Fuel prices in Cuba to rise by more than 500%

    The Cuban government announced that they will increase fuel prices by five times due to fuel shortages and financial difficulties.

    Starting in February, the price of a liter of gas will go up from 25 pesos to 132 pesos.

    The government gives money to many goods to help reduce its debt.

    This is the newest rule that is making life harder for Cubans who don’t have much money.

    Finance minister Vladimir Regueiro stated that the price of diesel and other types of gasoline would go up by similar amounts. He also said that the price of electricity will go up by 25% for big users in neighborhoods where people live, and that the cost of natural gas will also go up.

    Mr Regueiro said the government will open 29 new gas stations that will only take US dollars as payment. This will help the government get enough foreign money to buy fuel from other countries.

    “Mr Regueiro said on Monday that these steps are meant to help our economy get better. ”

    Cuba’s economy has taken a big hit because of problems caused by the coronavirus, tighter sanctions from the US, and weaknesses in the country’s infrastructure.

    Last month, the economy minister of Cuba, Alejandro Gil, said that the government can no longer sell fuel at reduced prices and that it was the cheapest in the world.

    Economics professor Omar Everleny Pérez said that even though gas is cheap in Cuba compared to other countries, it’s still very expensive for people who live there because their salaries are low.

    He said that the new prices will impact everyone in society.

    In a country where not many people have cars, the price of petrol going up makes it even harder for people to afford one.

    Cuba relies a lot on things from other countries. For the past four years, it has not had enough food, medicine, or things for people to buy.

    The cost of things is going up, and also the prices of basic items are going up. People who work for the government aren’t getting paid more, which makes it harder for people in Cuba to afford things.

    The fuel shortage is causing long lines at gas stations, which can sometimes be miles long and make it take a long time to fill up a car with gas. Public transportation has also been greatly impacted.

    The government had to cancel Cuba’s May Day parade in 2023 because there were not enough things to do it.

  • Three people killed in building collapse in Havana’s historic district

    At least three people died when a residential building in Havana, Cuba, collapsed.

    The building collapsed on Tuesday night and the rescue team found the body of a 79-year-old resident on Wednesday afternoon.

    The two other people who got hurt were rescue workers. They were looking for people in the building when it collapsed again.

    Havana has a lot of old houses that are in very bad condition and may be unsafe.
    The housing minister of Cuba recently said that 850,000 homes on the island need to be fixed.

    Old Havana is a favorite spot for tourists who take pictures of its old houses that used to be grand but are now falling apart.

    However, for the people living there, not having enough appropriate housing results in many families being forced to live in buildings that are about to fall apart.

    The government says that it cannot get building materials to do repairs because the United States has put an economic punishment on the island.

    It said it would start a countrywide project to construct new buildings in 2018, but people who disagree with this claim that it focused more on building hotels to bring in tourists and make money instead of providing homes for the people who live there.

    The recent building collapse in Havana is part of a series of accidents that have happened to the city’s homes.

  • Developing countries hampered by climate change – Cuba

    Developing countries hampered by climate change – Cuba

    Cuba recently held a meeting called G77 + China in Havana. One of the main topics discussed was fairness for all countries. President Miguel Diaz-Canel will talk about this in his speech at the United Nations today.

    He said that the countries that did not cause much climate change are experiencing the worst effects, while wealthy countries are not doing their part to help.

    Diaz-Canel said that debt is stopping developing nations from doing things to make their countries better or protect them from climate changes. He asked for the debt to be repaid in a better way.

  • Cuba refers to US nuclear submarine stationed at Guantanamo Bay as “provocative escalation”

    Cuba refers to US nuclear submarine stationed at Guantanamo Bay as “provocative escalation”

    Tuesday’s claim by Cuban authorities that the United States recently had a nuclear-powered submarine at its military installation at Guantanamo Bay was described as a “provocative escalation” of tensions after Washington claimed that the island was home to a Chinese spy station.

    Cuba’s foreign ministry released a statement in which it stated that “the presence of a nuclear submarine there at this time makes it imperative to wonder what is the military reason behind this action in this peaceful region of the world.” That a submarine was stationed at the naval outpost was not confirmed by Washington.

    The submarine may or may not have been armed, according to the ministry. It stated that from July 5 to July 8, it was at the base.

    The American State Department refused to provide details regarding the movements of military equipment.

    It claimed that Cuba was attempting to divert attention away from the two-year anniversary of the country’s largest public demonstrations since Fidel Castro’s revolution of 1959. Cuba has charged the United States with stirring up the turmoil on Monday.

  • Ghanaian medical students in Cuba bemoan stipend arrears of more than seven months

    Ghanaian medical students in Cuba bemoan stipend arrears of more than seven months

    Ghanaian medical students studying in Cuba on government scholarships are complaining that their stipends for the past seven months have not been paid.

    The students lament that the situation is making life difficult for them as they live on the benevolence of colleagues and friends.

    They explain that the Scholarship Secretariat has on various occasions assured that monies would be released but nothing is yet to hit their accounts.

    Speaking on Eyewitness News on condition of anonymity, one of the students said he can only hope that some monies would be released soon. 

    “We are still hopeful that the government or our sponsors– that is the Ghana scholarship secretariat– will get us some amount of money for some months so that things can be easy for us so that living in Cuba will be free for us, and we can focus o our studies,” One of the students bemoaned over the non-payment of the stipends.

    He added, “we know things are very hard in Ghana, we all heard the news of happenings in Ghana, but we are still pleading with them to work and get us some amount of money because the situation in Cuba is worse, I know they bear witnesses to that. There are no other means, we don’t work, and the only means to get money is the stipends. Getting money from Ghana is difficult, and it has to come from your parents. Please we are pleading with the officials, our sponsors, we know they do care about us, they should work out something for our survival”.

  • UN General Assembly rebukes US embargo on Cuba

    The UN General Assembly votes 185-2 to condemn the US embargo on Cuba, marking the 30th time the UN has condemned the decades-old US policy.

    The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) has strongly condemned the United States embargo on Cuba, which Havana has demanded be lifted amid the Caribbean island’s economic crisis.

    On Thursday, 185 countries overwhelmingly supported a non-binding resolution condemning the embargo, with the United States and Israel voting against and Brazil and Ukraine abstaining.

    It was the UN’s 30th vote condemning the US policy, which has been in place for decades.

    “The United States opposes this resolution, but we stand with the Cuban people and will continue to seek ways to provide meaningful support to them,” US Political Coordinator, John Kelley, told the UNGA on Thursday.

    “If the United States government was really interested in the welfare, human rights and self-determination of Cubans, it could lift the blockade,” countered Yuri Gala, Cuba’s deputy representative at the UN.

    The US imposed the embargo in 1960, following the Cuban revolution led by Fidel Castro and the nationalisation of properties belonging to US citizens and corporations.

    Two years later the measure – which prohibits trade between the two countries, among other restrictions – was strengthened.

    US President Barack Obama took considerable steps to ease tensions with Cuba during his time in office, including formally restoring US-Cuba relations and making a “historic” visit to Havana in 2016.

    That year, the US also abstained for the first time during a UN vote condemning the embargo.

    Former US President Donald Trump, however, scrapped such efforts and took a more hardline approach, stepping up sanctions and rolling back steps towards normalisation.

    Current President Joe Biden’s administration has not deviated substantially from Trump’s policies but has taken a handful of steps to relax restrictions on remittances and flights to Cuba.

    Tensions between Havana and Washington also have escalated over issues such as migration, security, and regional relations in recent months.

    Ahead of Thursday’s UN vote, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez accused the Biden administration of continuing down a path of “maximum pressure”. Rodriguez said that during Biden’s 14 months in office, the embargo had cost the Cuban economy about $6.35bn.

    US representatives countered that economic penalties were a response to human rights abuses by the Cuban government, which cracked down on protests in July 2021 demanding political freedom and better economic conditions.

    Cuba has sanctioned nearly 400 people for participation in the protests, giving many lengthy prison sentences.

    The crackdown prompted condemnation from rights groups as well as new sanctions from the US.

    Havana has pushed back against criticism of its human rights record. “Cuba does not need lessons on democracy and human rights, much less from the United States,” Gala said on Thursday.

  • Guantanamo Bay: US has released oldest detainee, Saifullah Paracha

    After nearly two decades in detention at Guantanamo Bay, Pakistan’s oldest prisoner has been released.

    Saifullah Paracha, 75, was arrested two years after the 9/11 attacks on the United States and charged with being an al-Qaeda sympathiser.

    Mr. Paracha was suspected of financing a jihadist organisation, but he maintained his innocence and was never charged.

    The US military prison in Cuba once housed hundreds of suspected militants captured following the attacks.

    “Mr Saif Ullah Paracha, a Pakistani national, who was detained in Guantanamo Bay, has been released and reached Pakistan on Saturday, 29 October 2022,” Pakistan’s foreign ministry said.

    “We are glad that a Pakistani citizen detained abroad is finally reunited with his family,” the statement added.

    Clive Stafford-Smith, Mr Paracha’s lawyer, questioned why it had taken so long for his client to be released.

    “He’s been cleared for release [for] well over a year… he used to hum to me The Eagles song Hotel California, where you can [according to the lyrics] check out ‘but you can never leave’,” Mr Stafford-Smith told the BBC’s Newshour programme.

    Mr Paracha was captured in July 2003 in Thailand following a sting operation by the American FBI [Federal Bureau of Investigations].

    Mr Paracha, who studied in the US, was accused by US authorities of having contact with some of the group’s most senior figures, including its leader Osama bin Laden and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

    After 14 months at a US military prison in Bagram, Afghanistan, he was transferred to Guantanamo.

    The secretive US military prison has been used to hold what America describes as captured unlawful combatants during its “war on terror”.

    US President Joe Biden is under pressure to clear out uncharged prisoners and move ahead with the trials of those accused of having direct ties to al-Qaeda.

    His administration approved Mr Paracha’s release last year, along with that of another Pakistani national, 55-year-old Abdul Rabbani, and Yemen native Uthman Abdul al-Rahim Uthman, 41.

    The statement from the Pakistani foreign ministry did not mention Rabbani.

    There are still 35 people being held at Guantanamo – including Khalid Mohammed, named as “the principal architect of the 9/11 attacks” in the 9/11 Commission Report.

    The lawyer of Mr Paracha said he expected more detainees to be freed over the coming months.

    “I’ve still got four clients there [at Guantanamo], all of whom are cleared for release,” he told the BBC, adding it was an “embarrassment to the US”.

  • Cubans take to the streets over power outages

    It’s not just the US that has been thrown into disarray by Hurricane Ian.

    Last night, Cubans took to the streets to bang pots and protest across several neighbourhoods in the capital Havana as the country entered its third day of blackouts following the seismic storm.

    The massive storm caused Cuba’s grid to collapse earlier this week, knocking out power to the entire island of 11 million people, flattening homes and obliterating fields.

    For some Cubans – already reeling from shortages of food, fuel and medicine – the prolonged blackout was the last straw.

    Jorge Luis Cruz, of Havana’s El Cerro neighborhood, stood in his doorway on Thursday evening banging a metal pot and shouting in anger.

    Dozens of others on side streets around his home could be heard banging pots from terraces and rooftops in the dark. “This isn’t working, enough of this,” Cruz told Reuters. “All my food is rotten. Why? Because we don’t have electricity.”

    Cruz said his family did not want him to take to the street out of fear he would be hauled off to jail. “Let them take me,” he said.

    Source: BBC

  • Hurricane Ian’s route through Florida from Cuba

    On Tuesday, Hurricane Ian first tore across Cuba in the Caribbean before making its way to Florida, as shown in these satellite photographs.

    Following its Wednesday and Thursday landfall in Florida, Ian was downgraded to a tropical storm.

    But as it moved into the Atlantic Ocean it regained its hurricane strength and is now heading for South Carolina and Georgia.

    Satellite images showing Ian's progress from Cuba across Florida
  • Cubans protest power cuts in the streets

    The aftermath of Hurricane Ian has affected countries other than the United States.

    As the nation entered its third day of darkness following the seismic storm, Cubans rushed to the streets last night to beat pots and protest in various Havana neighbourhoods.

    The massive storm caused Cuba’s grid to collapse earlier this week, knocking out power to the entire island of 11 million people, flattening homes, and obliterating fields.

    For some Cubans – already reeling from shortages of food, fuel, and medicine – the prolonged blackout was the last straw.

    Jorge Luis Cruz, of Havana’s El Cerro neighborhood, stood in his doorway on Thursday evening banging a metal pot and shouting in anger.

    Dozens of others on side streets around his home could be heard banging pots from terraces and rooftops in the dark. “This isn’t working, enough of this,” Cruz told Reuters. “All my food is rotten. Why? Because we don’t have electricity.”

    Cruz said his family did not want him to take to the street out of fear he would be hauled off to jail. “Let them take me,” he said.

  • Ukrainians told to be ready to fight for Russia

    Ukraine’s progress in the southern regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia has been far more limited than its successes in the north-east.

    Front line positions come under regular fire as both Russia and Ukraine attempt to push forward. The BBC’s Abdujalil Abdurasulov gained rare access to the Ukrainian front line in Kherson region.

    An old Soviet self-propelled howitzer called Gvozdika or “Carnation” is rolled out in an open field and put into position. Its barrel tilts up. “Fire!” comes the command.

    The gunners hastily move away after the last shot, acting quickly.

    Although the advancement of Ukrainian forces in the south is very slow, their artillery units remain busy.

    Stus, commander of the gunners, explains that the Russians target his infantry and they respond in order to silence them.

    Their job is very much felt at the front line. Soldiers walk across the vast field under the cover of a line of trees. They pay no attention to the sound of missiles flying above their head nor the thud of explosions. The fighters say a Russian observation post is 500m away and they might be within the range of small arms.

    The Ukrainians move quickly to reach a destroyed farm building that they took back just a week ago. Now, they are digging trenches and carrying sandbags in order to fortify their new position.

    Stus, commander of the gunners standing next to the “Gvozdika” howitzer
    Image caption, Stus, commander of the gunners, says troops “shouldn’t underestimate our enemy”

    But Ukraine’s advancement in the south is moving slowly.

    All talk about counter-offensive here helps to deceive Russians and achieve gains in the East, laughs Vasyl, a deputy commander of the regiment.

    “But we have some success here as well. We continue liberating villages with small steps but it’s very difficult – every victory we have is covered with blood,” he adds.

    Many Ukrainians who remain behind the Russian front line, in the occupied territories, are anxiously waiting for this counter-offensive.

    “We’re euphoric when Ukraine hits the occupied territories,” says Iryna, a resident of Melitopol in the south. “It means that Ukraine has not forgotten us. We all know that living near military infrastructure and buildings is not safe, so most civilians have moved out from those locations.”

    But for people in the occupied territories, the longer they wait, the harder it is to survive. Many believed that the counter-offensive would happen in August. But when that didn’t happen, people started to flee towards Ukrainian controlled territories and areas further to the West.

    Among them was Tatyana Kumok from Melitopol. The Israeli citizen was visiting her hometown when the Russian invasion started in February. She stayed in the city and distributed aid to residents but in September, she and her family decided to leave. One of the main reasons for leaving was Russia’s promise to hold a so-called referendum.

    “As soon as it’s done, the Russians will introduce new bans according to their laws and try to legitimise the occupation,” she says.

    With the city turned into a giant military base, she says it is clear that Russian troops won’t abandon the city easily.

    “It was obvious the city won’t be liberated this fall,” she adds.

    Tatyana Kumok helping distribute aidIMAGE SOURCE,TATYANA KUMOK
    Image caption, Tatyana Kumok and her family fled Melitopol just before Russia decided to hold a so-called referendum

    Even a silent resistance to Russian occupation is getting dangerous now.

    In September many families were forced to send their children to Russian-administered schools even though their children would be exposed to the Kremlin’s propaganda.

    “If you don’t send your child to school, it’s a litmus test for you – it means you have pro-Ukrainian views,” explains Ms Kumok. “I know parents who had to tell their seven-year-old child not to talk about things discussed at home with anyone at school. Otherwise the child could be taken away. That was really awful.”

    A picture taken during a visit to Berdyansk organized by the Russian military shows children at a newly opened kindergarten in Berdyansk, Zaporizhia regionIMAGE SOURCE,EPA
    Image caption, Children at a newly opened nursery in Russian occupied Berdyansk of Zaporizhia region

    The crackdown on people who do not support Russian rule is rising.

    “There is a sharp increase of arrests since August following the successful Ukrainian air strikes,” says Bohdan who is still living in Kherson. He spoke with the BBC via a messenger app and his real name is not being revealed for his safety.

    Bohdan says that earlier detentions were based on a list of names that the Russian military had. But now anyone can be arrested and thrown into a basement for interrogation.

    Russian soldiers recently came to the house of Hanna (not her real name) in Nova-Kakhovka, a city in Kherson region, to check who was living there.

    “They didn’t go inside the house but it was still scary. I don’t even walk with my phone now,” she said via a messenger app.

    A woman casts her ballot during voting in a so-called referendum on the joining of Russian-controlled regions of Ukraine to Russia, in a hospital in Berdyansk, Zaporizhzhia regionIMAGE SOURCE,EPA
    Image caption, A woman in Russian occupied Zaporizhzhia casts her ballot during voting in a so-called referendum

    The self-styled referendum is bringing a new threat to the local population – mobilisation. Many men could be drafted to fight for the Russian army.

    Russian soldiers are already going house to house in some villages and writing down the names of male residents, local residents say. They claim soldiers have told them to be ready for a call-up after the referendum.

    Men aged 18-35 are reportedly not allowed to leave the occupied territories any more.

    Iryna left on 23 September, the first day of the so-called referendum, with her husband and two children. They wanted to stay in order to look after her paralysed 92-year-old grandmother.

    “But when Putin announced the call-up, and we already knew about the referendum, it was clear there would be a mass mobilization and men would be detained right on the street irrespective of their age,” she says.

    “We could survive without gas and electricity, we could find solutions for that. But not for this. That was our red line,” says Iryna.

    Vasyl, a deputy commander of the regiment in uniform smiling at the camera
    Image caption, Vasyl, a deputy commander in the Ukrainian army says “every victory we have is covered with blood”

    The Russian call-up will pose more challenges for the Ukrainian counter-offensive.

    It will certainly escalate the war and more people will die, Ukrainian soldiers say.

    “We shouldn’t underestimate our enemy,” says Stus, commander of the gunners. “Those new recruited Russian soldiers will have guns and grenades, so they will pose a threat, which we will have to eliminate”.

    As the gunners wait for new tasks with their howitzer hidden in the bushes, Russian troops hit a nearby Ukrainian village with Grad missiles. The gunners are silent as they listen to the series of explosions.

    That terrifying sound was just another reminder that the success of the Ukrainian troops will depend on how quickly they can make Russian artillery and rocket launchers go silent.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Hurricane Ian: Cuba suffers complete blackout after storm

    Cuba is completely without power after Hurricane Ian pummelled the western end of the island, its government has announced.

    The electrical system is experiencing total collapse, officials said, after one of the main power plants could not be brought back online.

    Two people were reported dead and buildings were damaged nationwide.

    The category three hurricane, packing wind speeds of up to 195km/h (120mph), is now bearing down on Florida.

    On Cuban state television on Tuesday, the head of the electrical energy authority announced that an island-wide blackout had occurred as a result of the national electrical system’s breakdown, leaving 11 million people in the dark.

    A journalist with a state-run news agency reported that 100% of the electrical circuits in the country were out of service and that “the Antonio Guiteras thermo-electric power plant… could not be synchronised”.

    Based in Matanzas, 100km east of the capital Havana, Antonio Guiteras is the most important energy plant in Cuba. Its shutdown means there is currently no electricity generation anywhere on the island.

    The owner of the famous Finca Robaina cigar producer posted photos on social media of the havoc wreaked by the hurricane in the tobacco farms.

    “It was apocalyptic, a real disaster,” wrote Hirochi Robaina.

    Forecasters had warned that some regions of Cuba could see up to 30cm (12in) of rain under Hurricane Ian.

    Mayelin Suarez, a resident of Pinar del Rio, said Monday night, when the storm hit, was “the darkest of her life”.

    “We almost lost the roof off our house,” she told Reuters. “My daughter, my husband and I tied it down with a rope to keep it from flying away.”

    Cuban President Miguel Diaz Canel visited the province and vowed that it would rise “above adversity”, the Cuban presidency tweeted.

    Predicted path of Hurricane Ian. Updated 27 September
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    A 43-year-old woman in the province was killed after the walls of her home collapsed. A farmer in the town of San Juan y Martínez was electrocuted while trying to shut off a wind turbine used for irrigation, the New York Times reported.

    The hurricane has been gathering force in the south-eastern Gulf of Mexico after leaving Cuba, says the US National Hurricane Center (NHC).

    On Tuesday night the storm was passing over the Florida Keys, a string of islands off the southern tip of the state.

    It is projected to make landfall on Florida’s west coast late on Wednesday.

    The NHC says that Ian could be a category four hurricane by the time it strikes Florida’s western coast, with wind speeds topping 130mph. Some 2.5 million people in Florida are under evacuation orders.

    A satellite image of the storm
    A satellite image of the storm

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis warned in a news conference on Tuesday that the storm is “the real deal”.

    He declared a state of emergency for all of Florida over the weekend and has activated 5,000 National Guard troops.

    The Tampa area could receive its first direct hit from a hurricane since 1921, officials say, and might see 3m (10ft) of storm surge along the coast.

    Meteorologists have said flash flooding is possible in the Florida peninsula and Florida Keys as the hurricane approaches.

    The neighbouring state of Georgia has also declared a state of emergency and placed 500 National Guard troops on standby.

    The White House has made its own emergency declaration, which will help federal and state officials co-ordinate disaster relief and assistance.

    President Joe Biden, a Democrat, spoke with Gov DeSantis, a Republican, on Tuesday evening, and the two committed to “continued close co-ordination”, the White House said.

    The Caribbean is still reeling from the effects of Hurricane Fiona, which tore through the region last week.

    Moving northward to parts of the Atlantic Canada coastline and eastern Quebec, Fiona claimed two lives, washed homes into the sea and downed power lines over the weekend.

    Source: BBC

  • Cuba Family Code: Country votes to approve same-sex marriage

    In a national referendum, Cubans decided to legalise same-sex marriages.

    A new Family Code that will also permit surrogate pregnancies and grant gay couples the ability to adopt children was approved by around two-thirds of the electorate.

    It marks a big moment for Cuba, which saw gay people persecuted and sent to work camps in the 1960s and 70s.

    However, there was significant opposition to the reforms among religious groups and conservatives.

    The referendum on Sunday was for a new Family Code – a 100-page document that went through more than two dozen drafts and hours of debate in community-level meetings.

    Cuba’s government had backed the law change and ran a nationwide campaign urging people to approve it.

    Speaking as he voted on Sunday, the country’s President, Miguel Díaz-Canel, said he expected most of the population would vote yes and that the new code reflected the diversity of people, families, and beliefs.

    On Monday, preliminary results indicated an “irreversible trend”, with 66% of votes counted so far in favour of the reform, electoral council president Alina Balseiro said on state television, according to AFP news agency. The law required 50% of voters’ approval to be adopted.

    The reforms were the culmination of efforts by gay rights activists in Cuba.

    Official attitudes towards homosexuality on the Communist-run island have changed over the past decades, partly thanks to the efforts of former leader Raúl Castro’s daughter Mariela.

    In the early part of communist leader Fidel Castro’s rule after the 1959 revolution, homosexual men and women were sent to work camps for supposed “re-education”.

    However, many in Cuba still oppose the step, including evangelical churches and other non-religious conservatives.

    Parts of the opposition also campaigned for a “no” vote, urging Cubans to seize a unique opportunity to hand the country’s communist government a defeat in the polls.

    Some anti-government activists consider the referendum an effort by the state to improve its human rights image following a brutal crackdown on all forms of dissent in recent years.

    The referendum also comes during a serious energy crisis, which has led to daily power cuts affecting millions of people across the island.

    A child holds a banner which reads "Code Yes" referring to a family code referendum to take place on September 25, during a state organized pro-referendum demonstration in Havana, Cuba, September 17, 2022. REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
    A child holds a banner that reads “code yes”

  • Cuba Family Code: Country votes to legalise same-sex marriage

    Cuba has voted to legalise same-sex marriage in a national referendum.

    About two-thirds of the population voted to approve reforms in a new Family Code, which will also allow surrogate pregnancies and give gay couples the right to adopt children.

    It marks a big moment for Cuba, which saw gay people persecuted and sent to work camps in the 1960s and 70s.

    However, there was significant opposition to the reforms among religious groups and conservatives.

    The referendum on Sunday was for a new Family Code – a 100-page document which went through more than two dozen drafts and hours of debate in community-level meetings.

    Cuba’s government had backed the law change and ran a nationwide campaign urging people to approve it.

    Speaking as he voted on Sunday, the country’s President, Miguel Díaz-Canel, said he expected most of the population would vote yes and that the new code reflected the diversity of people, families and beliefs.

    On Monday, preliminary results indicated an “irreversible trend”, with 66% of votes counted so far in favour of the reform, electoral council president Alina Balseiro said on state television, according to AFP news agency. The law required 50% of voters’ approval to be adopted.

    The reforms were the culmination of efforts by gay rights activists in Cuba.

    Official attitudes towards homosexuality on the Communist-run island have changed over the past decades, partly thanks to the efforts of former leader Raúl Castro’s daughter Mariela.

    In the early part of communist leader Fidel Castro’s rule after the 1959 revolution, homosexual men and women were sent to work camps for supposed “re-education”.

    However, many in Cuba still oppose the step, including evangelical churches and other non-religious conservatives.

    Parts of the opposition also campaigned for a “no” vote, urging Cubans to seize a unique opportunity to hand the country’s communist government a defeat in the polls.

    • Cuba’s first ever LGBTQ hotel opens

    Some anti-government activists consider the referendum an effort by the state to improve its human rights image following a brutal crackdown on all forms of dissent in recent years.

    The referendum also comes during a serious energy crisis, which has led to daily power cuts affecting millions of people across the island.

     

    Source: BBC

  • Cuba’s worst fire : Now under control after 5 days continuous burning

    On Tuesday, firefighters finally overcame what officials described as the worst fire in Cuba‘s history that over five days destroyed 40% of the Caribbean island’s main fuel storage facility and resulted in massive blackouts.

    Reuters witnesses reported the raging flames that ravaged a four-tank segment of the Matanzas supertanker port had died down and the towering plumes of thick black smoke streaming from the area were diminished and now mostly gray.
    Matanzas is Cuba’s largest port for receiving crude oil and fuel imports. Cuban heavy crude, as well as fuel oil and diesel stored in Matanzas in 10 huge tanks, are mainly used to generate electricity on the island.

    Firefighters on Tuesday finally overcame what officials described as the worst fire in Cuba’s history that over five days destroyed 40% of the Caribbean island’s main fuel storage facility and caused massive blackouts.

    Reuters witnesses reported the raging flames that ravaged a four-tank segment of the Matanzas supertanker port had died down and the towering plumes of thick black smoke streaming from the area were diminished and now mostly gray.
    Matanzas is Cuba’s largest port for receiving crude oil and fuel imports. Cuban heavy crude, as well as fuel oil and diesel stored in Matanzas in 10 huge tanks, are mainly used to generate electricity on the island.
    Lightning struck one fuel storage tank on Friday evening. The fire spread for a second by Sunday and engulfed the four-tank area on Monday, accompanied by huge explosions and despite efforts by local firefighters supported by more than 100 Mexican and Venezuelan reinforcements.
    Firefighter Rafael Perez Garriga told Reuters on the steaming outskirts of the disaster that he worries the fire would impact the power situation in the country.
    “The situation is going to be more difficult. If the thermoelectric plants are supplied with that oil, we are going to have the whole world affected, it is electricity and it affects everything,” he said.

    A man fishes as smoke rises from the massive fire at a fuel depot in Matanzas, Cuba, on August 9, 2022.

    The Communist-run country, under heavy US sanctions, is all but bankrupt. Frequent blackouts and shortages of gasoline and other commodities already had created a tense situation with scattered local protests following last summer’s historic unrest in July.
    On Tuesday, more helicopters joined the effort to put out the fire, along with two fireboats sent by Mexico along with heavy firefighting equipment.
    “We have not yet been able to access the impact area due to the conditions. There is combustion and so we cannot risk our lives for now,” Perez said around noon.
    Smoke rises from a deadly fire at a large oil storage facility in Matanzas, Cuba on August 9.
    Later in the day firefighters for the first time were entering the area and spraying foam and water on the still smoldering remains.
    “Today we have managed to control the fire,” Rolando Vecino, head of transport for the Ministry of the Interior, said on state-run television from the scene.
    Officials have not said how much fuel has been lost in the fire which destroyed all four tanks. Authorities stated that no oil had contaminated the nearby
    Matanzas Bay. Still, they warned residents as far away as Havana to wear face masks and avoid acid rain due to the massive plume of smoke the fire generated.

    A firefighter helicopter drops water on a massive fire at a fuel depot in Matanzas, Cuba, on August 8.

    One firefighter died and 14 went missing on Saturday when the second tank blew up, authorities said on Tuesday, correcting an earlier figure of 16 missings. Five others remain in critical condition.
    Mario Sabines, governor of the Matanzas province, about 60 miles (130 km) from Havana, quipped the flames spread like an “Olympic torch” from one tank to the next, turning each into a “caldron.”
  • Cuba protesters jailed for up to 25 years

    Cuba has sentenced 381 people for taking part in rare anti-government protests last summer – with some jailed for up to 25 years.

    The attorney general’s office said 297 had received prison terms, for crimes of sedition, public disorder, assault or robbery.

    A minority were given the option to complete community service instead.

    Thousands of Cubans took part in the demonstrations across the Communist-run island, chanting for “freedom”.

    The protests, the largest in decades, came amid a severe economic crisis with protesters voicing anger over price increases, and shortages of food and medicine.

    Unauthorised public gatherings are illegal in Cuba, and more than 1,000 people were arrested. Images on social media showed what appeared to be security forces detaining, beating and pepper-spraying some of the protesters.

    Those sentenced included “16 young people aged 16 to 18”, according to the country’s public prosecutor on Monday.

    In 2021, Cuba‘s President Miguel Díaz-Canel blamed the US – which has a decades-long history of tensions with Cuba – for the turmoil.

    He claimed the protesters were mercenaries hired to destabilise the country, and called on supporters to go out and defend the revolution – referring to the 1959 uprising which ushered in Communist rule.

    This round of jail terms isn’t the first linked to the protests. In March, more than 100 people who took part were sentenced to between six and 30 years’ imprisonment.

    The US and EU have criticised the trials for lacking transparency, and called for the release of those affected.

    Source: BBC
  • Coronavirus: SA to pay $14m for Cuban doctors, says minister

    South Africa’s Health Minister Zweli Mkhize has said Cuban doctors brought in to fight the coronavirus outbreak will cost the country $14m (£11m).

    The minister said the 187 specialists – including biostatisticians, epidemiologists, family physicians and health technologists – will be accommodated until 2021.

    Dr Mkhize said the medics were qualified in areas in which the country was struggling to produce enough experts.

    “The estimated budget cost is informed by actual appointment levels of the Cuban health brigade as determined by their registration category, which took into consideration years of experience,” the minister explained in a letter to parliament.

    The arrival of Cuban doctors in South Africa to help fight coronavirus ruffled feathers as an association said unemployed local medics should have been given priority to work.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Cuban doctors ruffle feathers in South Africa

    The arrival of more than 200 Cuban medics in South Africa to help battle coronavirus has received mixed reactions, with some of the sharpest criticism coming from the South African Medical Association (Sama).

    The organisation, which represents about 16,000 health workers, says it welcomes extra hands but says unemployed local medics should have been given priority.

    “There are many unemployed doctors in South Africa and many community service medical officers have still not been placed. In addition, many private practitioners have indicated their willingness to assist,” IOL news quotes Sama head Angelique Coetzee as saying.

    There have also been raised eyebrows about a Business Live article saying it is going to cost taxpayers 440m rand ($24m; £19m) to have the Cubans in the country for a year.

    The team of Cuban medics include family physicians, epidemiologists, biotechnology experts and health-care technology engineers who are being deployed across the country.

    Health Minister Zweli Mkhize has sought to play down the concerns, saying no jobs would be threatened.

    “We welcome them and we want to assure everyone that they will not take anyone’s posts and they will be working alongside South Africans. There should not be anyone that feels that they are a threat to [local employment],” Mr Mkhize said.

    He added that the Cuban medics were particularly experienced in community medicine.

    Cuba is also believed to be one of the leaders in using biotechnology in disease prevention and has expertise in handling infectious diseases.

    South African officials say they requested Cuba’s help to try and prevent an escalation of coronavirus infections as has been seen in Europe and the US.

    South Africa currently has nearly 5,000 confirmed cases, the highest in Africa – with 93 deaths – and its health system, particularly state hospitals, is already overstretched.

    Cuba and South Africa have close ties and the Caribbean island was instrumental in the fight against white-minority rule in South Africa, which did not end until 1994 when anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela was elected president.

    Since then Cuban doctors been working in some of the most rural parts of South Africa, including at the height of the HIV pandemic.

    Source: bbc.com