Cuba

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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Tue Aug 28, 2018 12:27 pm

The path to proclamation for Cuba’s new Constitution
While proclamation of the country’s new Constitution is still several months away, Granma summarizes the steps to be taken

Author: Lissy Rodríguez Guerrero | informacion@granma.cu

august 27, 2018 14:08:51

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Photo: Prensa Miraflores

The popular consultation has begun, and streets, workplaces, schools, and even houses have become places to debate, legislate, and take charge of the times to come.

Still several months away is the proclamation of the country’s new Constitution, one of the world’s most modern, as specialists in the field have said, given the additions proposed by the commission charged with writing the first draft, which was subsequently approved by the National Assembly of People’s Power.

Nonetheless, already taking shape among Cubans is the document that will provide the country a useful economic, political, and social order, and protect citizens’ rights: the new Cuban Constitution.

But what is the route to proclamation of this new Constitution?

Granma summarizes the steps to be taken...

1. Popular consultation meetings are held, in which citizens express their opinions and suggest changes to the proposed draft:

- 135,000 meetings between August 13 and November 15

- The Cuban people will meet in workplaces, schools, and communities - and may participate in more than one meeting.

2. Processing of proposals is conducted by the Center for Socio-political Studies and Opinion:- The proposed Constitution consists of a preamble and 224 articles, divided into 11 titles, 24 chapters and 16 sections.- To assist in the analysis and processing of opinions, each paragraph has been numbered, a total of 755.- Two-person teams leading meetings will be responsible for the minutes. All proposals made by the population will be taken into account. No votes will be conducted; all are to be recorded in the minutes.- The proposals may be:- Modification: A suggestion to add, replace, or delete a phrase or word in a paragraph.- Addition: A proposal to add a new paragraph because the the idea is not stated in the draft.- Elimination: A proposal to eliminate a paragraph because the citizen considers it unnecessary or does not agree with the content.- Clarification: A request for clarification when the citizen believes an idea expressed in a paragraph is not clear or understandable.3. Submission of proposals to the Commission in charge of preparing the draft Constitution:- Within 48 hours of each meeting, those who took minutes must deliver them to the municipal team, which organizes the information in the form of proposals. The provincial team meets and forwards proposals to the national team.- Proposals will be organized by paragraph, clearly and precisely- Finally, a Proposal Report will be prepared, which will be submitted to the Constitutional Reform Commission, for the evaluation of proposals and the re-writing of the document as deemed necessary4. The document returns to the National Assembly:

- The amended text is returned to the National Assembly for a final discussion and is submitted to a vote for approval.

5. A referendum is called

- The Council of State, in accordance with the National Assembly decision, orders the publication of a convocation for a referendum in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Cuba, and appoints members of the National Electoral Commission

6. Referendum

- The text is submitted for approval in a referendum via a direct, secret ballot vote by citizens.

7. Proclamation

- Upon receiving the people’s backing, the Constitution is proclaimed and as of that moment becomes the law of the land in Cuba.

http://en.granma.cu/cuba/2018-08-27/the ... nstitution
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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Wed Aug 29, 2018 12:42 pm

U.S. recognizes negative impact of its policy toward Cuba
The negative impact of staff reductions at the U.S. embassy in Cuba, as well as the harshness of its warning on travel to the country, were acknowledged recently in Washington

Author: Darcy Borrero Batista | informacion@granma.cu

august 28, 2018 18:08:16

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Photo: Martirena

After awaiting the fall of Cuba like a ripe fruit for quite some long time, and shaking the tree hard, the United States has recognized a couple errors in its ambitious plan to take possession of the island.

Both the negative impact of staff reductions at the U.S. embassy in Cuba, as well as the harshness of its warning on travel to the country, were acknowledged recently in Washington, leading to a memorandum from the Congressional Research Service, in the first case, and a new travel warning category established by the State Department.

Concretely, the advisory on trips to Cuba by U.S. citizens is now a level two warning that recommends exercising caution.

Previously, the U.S. had unjustifiably described the country as unsafe for U.S. citizens, issuing a level three warning, with four being the highest, suggesting that travel to Cuba be reconsidered, despite the international prestige the country has gained as a safe destination, including an Excellence Prize from the 38th International Tourism Fair in held in Spain.

In terms of the reduction of accredited diplomatic staff in Havana, motivated by alleged sonic attacks which have never been proven, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) reached the conclusion that this move has had a negative impact.

Representative Eliot Engel, a Democrat from New York District 16, stated that he had requested an analysis from the CRS on the situation at the U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana, which indicated that personnel had been reduced to 14 staff members, from a total of 50. Additionally, the issuing of visas in Cuba for both immigrants and non-immigrants was suspended, and 17 Cuban diplomats in Washington were expelled from the United States.

Since these unilateral measures were adopted, the Cuban government and groups within the U.S. – including elected officials – have warned that families in the two countries are negatively impacted, and expressed concerns that the U.S. would not fulfill its commitment regarding the awarding of visas.

Among the problems created by the measures, the Congressional Research Service notes that the majority of Cubans requesting visas must do so at a U.S. embassy or consulate in another country, making visits to see family in the U.S. much more difficult. At the same time, Cuban professionals from the private sector and some cultural groups have been obliged to cancel activities in the U.S. as a result of the complicated visa request process.

The numbers speak for themselves. Despite the 1994 migratory agreement between the two countries, which establishes that the U.S. will award a minimum of 20,000 visas a year to Cubans, over the first nine months of 2018, less than 4,000 have been granted.

Nevertheless, for the U.S. giant always awaiting Cuba’s fall, these mistakes are only considered erroneous to the degree that they fail to advance the country’s strategic goal. Worth noting is the conclusion drawn in the CRS report that the staff cut in Havana “potentially diminishes the ability of the State Department to understand the situation on the ground,” and continues to justify its softened warning on travel to Cuba with references to unproven attacks on U.S. diplomats in Havana.

http://en.granma.cu/mundo/2018-08-28/us ... oward-cuba
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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Wed Aug 29, 2018 10:46 pm

Violations of legality will not go unpunished
This is demonstrated by the results of a control action recently carried out by the Fiscal Verification Department of the Provincial Prosecutor's Office, to the Sancti Spíritus Municipal Commerce Company, specifically to the Ideal El Convenio and La Naviera markets of the capital city.

Author: Leticia Martínez Hernández | internet@granma.cu

August 28, 2018 19:08:53

Violations that violate socialist legality and consumer protection will not go unpunished. This is demonstrated by the results of a control action recently carried out by the Fiscal Verification Department of the Provincial Prosecutor's Office, to the Municipal Commerce Company of Sancti Spíritus, specifically to the Ideal The Convention and La Naviera markets, of the head town, according to announced the weekly Escambray.
The controllers detected 19 violations of legality and, consequently, requested 15 disciplinary measures against four officials and 11 workers, and four complaints were filed for the alleged crimes of misappropriation, illegal economic activity and violation of consumer protection regulations.
In La Naviera, the investigation revealed an anomaly: the sale of products (Findy oregano and pancake) not fit for consumption because they are overdue. In the case of the last food, the existence of a batch in the warehouse was determined, where it remained at room temperature, to the detriment of what was instituted.
The Agreement detected the presence of 25 lines (black beans, peas ...) in the warehouse with quality problems, without being ruled by the authorized authority or making the adjustment.
The illegal introduction of products happened in La Naviera, where a dependent offered milled cumin, a brand she bought in Havana and sold at a higher price. In her backpack, the worker hid items that belonged to the unit's inventory.
Related to the accounting, there was a shortage of 3,924 pesos in the beverage area of ​​El Convenio, and 7,000 pesos were spent on a dependent, who tried to enter them to the center to justify the deficit of money in the box.
The verifying group confirmed a cash shortage in the box, encrypted at 420.62 pesos in the site dedicated to meat in the La Naviera market, and showed that the dependent there guarded 8 675 pesos collected from the sale that day.
When evaluating the inventory control and the cash coming from the sales in The Agreement, it was proven that products such as lemon juice and full seasoning were received from the Meneses mini-industry - supposedly by the consignment goods concept - from the June 30, without invoices and without accounting control. The amount of the sale amounted to 5,552.55 pesos and remained unposted and held by the administration.
The inspection brought to light that, in the aforementioned market, on July 16 and 17, the accounting was not given or received in the warehouse, all the merchandise received -its sum 235 356 pesos-, many of which had already been commercialized.
In the canning area, eggs and packages of cookies were received and sold without settling in the ipv model, the same as what happened with other lines. This irregularity took shape in the cereals section, where 14 products - valued at 150 119.62 pesos - were sold, not reflected in the necessary document.
This fiscal action, which was supported by Minint, the Integral Supervision Directorate and the Commercial Business Group, showed that the inspections carried out earlier in these markets lacked depth.
As a result of the detected, the pertinent administrative fines were imposed, the Municipal Commerce Company will devise a plan of measures to eradicate the violations and the application of the material responsibility in the fixed cases was established, without ignoring the criminal processes in course.

http://www.granma.cu/cuba/2018-08-28/la ... 8-19-08-53

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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Wed Sep 05, 2018 5:27 pm

A garden of biodiversity in Cuba
The Laguna de Guanaroca-Punta Gavilanes Protected Area and Refuge, occupying some 3,400 hectares of terrestrial and marine area, continues to captivate visitors

Author: Julio Martínez Molina | internet@granma.cu

september 5, 2018 11:09:49

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The impressive colony of pink flamingos is the lagoon’s most popular attraction. Photo: Modesto Gutiérrez
CIENFUEGOS.– The Laguna de Guanaroca-Punta Gavilanes Protected Area and Refuge, located in this province, is one of the country’s wonders and a source of amazement for all who visit.

A garden of biodiversity, the area harbors curiosities like the Annona havanenses, a plant species once believed to be extinct, but rediscovered here 25 years ago.

The area’s dense vegetation creates a harmonious natural tangle that includes wild mamoncillo, mahogany, calabash, yellow mastic, buttonwood, brasilettia, oak, copperwood, among other many xeromorphic species - more than 70 - in this coastal forest.

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The protected area is ideal for ecotourism. Photo: Modesto Gutiérrez

Also located here is the country’s best preserved mangrove. The Laguna de Guanaroca’s 3,038 hectares, including the keys Laberintos de los Naturales and Ocampo, plus several smaller islets within Jagua Bay, is considered the “womb” of the estuary, since this lacustrine lagoon is where a large number of fish species spawn.

The area is inhabited by 190 bird species, seven mammals, three amphibians, nine reptiles, 600 marine mollusks - in addition to land and fresh water species – and 120 varieties of fish, crustaceans, and turtles.

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The Cuban tody is one of the 190 bird species in the wildlife refuge. Photo: Modesto Gutiérrez

Living here alongside the national bird, the Cuban trogon, are todies, hummingbirds, cuckoos, mockingbirds, puffbirds, six types of warblers, doves, solivios, great kiskadees, ducks, egrets, pelicans, cormorants, gannets and gulls.

The year round presence of pink flamingos gives the landscape true splendor. They arrive from Florida, reproduce, and continue their migration toward the Máximo River or to keys on the northern coast, but while the adults leave, the young stay behind.

This is the place in Cuba where flamingos can be observed close-up, thanks to the silence reigning and the respect afforded the habitat, where more than a thousand pink flamingos can be seen together.

La Laguna de Guanaroca - only 15 kilometers from the city of Cienfuegos – is included in the City Conservation Office’s program of walks, allowing residents to access the wetland from a point near Convento Hill, an indigenous archaeological site with links to the colonial period, where Fray Bartolomé de las Casas left his mark on the community of Jagua.

Cuban and international visitors alike frequent the area, often on excursions scheduled weekly to the woods, or in kayaks through the estuary’s clear waters. All are captivated by the greenery and the water, with a view of the Guamuhaya Mountains in the distance.

LAGUNA DE GUANAROCA-PUNTA GAVILANES PROTECTED AREA AND REFUGE: FACTS AND FIGURES

- The Laguna de Guanaroca-Punta Gavilanes Protected Area and Refuge, contains some 3,400 hectares of terrestrial and marine area (with the lagoon itself occupying 3,038, the crown jewel and main attraction), located in the municipalities of Cienfuegos and Cumanayagua.

- The site is managed by the National Flora and Fauna Enterprise.

- Guanaroca is a coastal lagoon into which a branch of the Arimao River flows, and is connected to Jagua Bay.

- The name Guanaroca comes from the legend of a beautiful indigenous woman whose first child was killed in a fit of paternal jealousy. The mother’s grief was so great that her tears created the region’s rivers, Jagua Bay, and the lagoon.

- Several pre-Colombian and colonial archeological sites have been identified in the area by local experts, and objects unearthed include stone tools, remains of food consumed by the island’s original inhabitants, and ceramics.

http://en.granma.cu/cuba/2018-09-05/a-g ... ty-in-cuba
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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Fri Sep 14, 2018 4:48 pm

The Communist Party of Cuba, guarantor of democracy
We Cubans have only one Party, it is the party of its militants and of the other citizens, it is the party of the whole people, the party of the Cuban Revolution, the safeguard of popular power, of the socialist state of law

Author: Raúl Antonio Capote | internet@granma.cu

September 13, 2018 8:09:52 PM

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In Cuba, sovereignty resides in the people. Photo: Ricardo López Hevia

Máximo Gómez Báez, General in Chief of the Liberation Army in the War of Independence from 1895 to 1898, noted in his Diario de Campaña, on August 25, 1898, referring to the North American inspectors, "They wanted to erase even history." 1

The American occupiers liquidated the institutions created by the Cuban patriots: the Government of the Republic in Arms, the Assembly of Representatives, the Liberation Army and the Cuban Revolutionary Party, a party that grouped all the patriots, a leader of the Revolution, a guarantee of necessary unit, foundation of the democratic system that they dreamed of building.

It was the Party of the Marti Republic with everyone and for the good of all, guarantor of sovereignty and the institutional system. As history showed, it was not possible to build a true democracy without sovereignty. Democracy is inconceivable if there is no sovereign country, that is why it was essential for the interventionists, their national allies and sepoys, to make the Party founded by José Martí disappear.

The Cuban people were able to face all the sacrifices, overcome the brutal blow of 1898, the successive interventions in the neocolonial republic, the frustration of the 33rd, capable of defeating the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista supported by thousands of soldiers and supported by the Yankee empire

It is the people who fought 30 years against Spanish colonialism and elected representatives, discussed and promulgated constitutions, founded governments, legislated during the war, showing their democratic and civic spirit. The Cuban revolutionaries, together with the proven heroism, made a waste of concertation, of attachment to debate and faith in the value of ideas.

Cuba was born as a nation in the rebellious jungle, founded on pillars that today constitute the pillars of our socialism: equality, solidarity and justice.

It is Carlos Manuel de Céspedes who proclaims December 25, 1870, when he eliminates the libertarian rule, referring to blacks and Chinese, "to restore his natural quality of free men, exercising his personality with all amplitude, enjoying the same civil and political rights of other citizens with perfect equality ", when this occurs" in no parliament or bourgeois government of the Western world was even recognized, theoretically, that all male citizens could have civil and political rights. No one would have thought of the idea that they also had people of the races ... or people who were slaves until a few days ago ». 2

The Revolution meant from the first moment in 1959, the conquest of independence and sovereignty, was the triumph of a democratic revolution, based on solidarity, justice and equality. The Cuban people were able to carry out a work of justice and social development that has transformed the country and that has the respect and admiration of millions of people in the world.

At the head of that colossal transformative work has been the Party of all Cubans, the Communist Party of Cuba.

In 1976, while celebrating the 81st anniversary of the beginning of the War of Independence of 1895, the first socialist Constitution of America was proclaimed and put into effect, approved by the free, universal and secret vote of 98% of Cubans, in a process of exemplary democracy and conscious participation of citizens.

The majority support for the 1976 Constitution was a vote of acceptance of the citizenship to the leading role of Party 3 , which has a historical Marti root: "The party exists, sure of its reason, as the visible soul of Cuba", support which was ratified in 1992.

Incarnating the soul of Cuba constitutes a high ethical and political value, it entails legitimacy achieved with the prestige of its actions, as a visible will, as a real form that represents all Cubans.

The Communist Party of Cuba, which was born of the process of political unity of the Cuban nation, legatee of the most advanced Cuban and universal thought, received from the people who approved the 1976 Constitution, the encomienda, the condition, granted by the vote of the immense majority of the people, to guarantee the fulfillment of the Constitution.

Which means that it is due to her and that she is guarantor of compliance with the provisions of the Law of Laws. Of a Constitution that in its Article 1 declares that "Cuba is a socialist State of workers, independent and sovereign, organized with all and for the good of all, as a unitary and democratic republic, for the enjoyment of political freedom, social justice , individual and collective welfare and human solidarity ».

That in his preamble he affirms his awareness of "that our Revolution raised the dignity of the fatherland and of the Cuban at a higher level" and our will that the law of the Republic be presided over by this deep longing, finally achieved, by José Martí:

"I want the first law of our Republic to be the cult of Cubans to the full dignity of man."

And in its Article 3 it affirms: In the Republic of Cuba the sovereignty resides in the town.

In the actions of the Communist Party of Cuba are conditions sine quibus non the defense of democracy and the participation of the people, that the people are political subjects and always work for the people.

The repeated moments of popular consultation sponsored by the Party throughout the revolutionary process, reaffirm its democratic essence, recall the debates and consultations of the preliminary draft of the Constitution of the Republic of Cuba, the Workers' Parliaments in 1991, the debate on the documents of the First Congress of the Party, of the Appeal to the IV Congress, of the Guidelines of the Economic and Social Policy of the Party and the Revolution, of the Documents of the 7th. Congress of the Party, that counted on the massive and unquestionable credit of the massive citizen participation.

For Karl Marx, the struggle for socialism without the struggle for democracy makes no sense. For us, socialism, Marx said, means the democratic organization of the immense majority of society.
Lenin defines democracy as "the truly universal participation of the entire mass of the population in all matters of the State." 4

We Cubans have only one Party, it is the party of its militants and of the other citizens, it is the party of the whole people, the party of the Cuban Revolution, safeguard of popular power, of the socialist State of law.

The majorities that respond, once again, to the summoning of the Cuban communists, ratify the confidence in the role played by the political organization in the necessary transformations of Cuban society, confirming its support for socialism.

When the government exists for the people, not in appearances but concretely, and the people stop being spectators to become protagonists, our socialist democracy, which is how Mariátegui wanted "heroic creation" and not copy or copy, culmination of centuries of struggle , is carried out in the rule of law, legitimate son of the power of the people.

References:

1 Máximo Gómez. Journal of Campaign, Institute of the Book, Havana, 1968, p. 366

2 Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada. «Marxism and the crisis of neoliberal thought», Havana, June 30, 2000.

3 This article reads: «Art. 5 The Communist Party of Cuba, Marti and Marxist-Leninist, an organized vanguard of the Cuban nation, is the leading force of society and of the State, which organizes and guides common efforts towards the high ends of the construction of socialism and the advance of the communist society ».

4 VI Lenin: "Answer to Piatakov."

http://www.granma.cu/cuba/2018-09-13/el ... 8-20-09-52

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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Thu Sep 27, 2018 1:51 pm

uba’s Urban Farming Revolution: How to Create Self-Sufficient Cities
17 MARCH, 2014BY CAREY CLOUSE

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Havanas’s unique agricultural infrastructure emerged from punishing trade sanctions following the fall of the USSR but today provides an exemplary precedent that could be applied worldwide

When Cuba found itself abruptly cut off from trade with the Soviet bloc in 1989, the country entered into an economic crisis of unprecedented severity. Already sidelined from international trade due to US embargoes, Cuba became, almost overnight, a country detached from the rest of the world. In the years that followed, the tiny island nation struggled to export sugar and citrus fruits for more critical imports: the cereals, corn and meat that had become the staples of the Cuban diet. This was the beginning of Cuba’s food crisis, a period in which residents lost, on average, access to one third of their daily calories, the government instituted a peacetime austerity programme for food rationing, and most Cubans experienced widespread, inescapable hunger.

Along with the evaporation of food imports, Cuba lost access to the animal feed, fertilisers and fuel that had sustained the island’s agricultural efforts. Oil scarcity became so pervasive that it curbed pesticide and fertiliser production, limited the use of tractors and industrial farming equipment, and ultimately seized the transport and refrigeration network that was needed to deliver vegetables, meat and fruit to the tables throughout the region. Without the feed, fertilisers and fuel that had once sustained the nation, Cuba’s Green Revolution system of agriculture effectively unravelled.

Presented with a near collapse of its food provisioning system, the Cuban government responded with an overhaul of agriculture on the island, prioritising organic farming methods, the production of useful edible crops and the use of peasant labour. In urban areas, guerrilla gardening initiatives blossomed into new state-supported urban farming programmes, with widespread voluntary participation. These farming efforts have produced ‘what may be the world’s largest working model of a semi-sustainable agriculture’, [1] and in the process, resurrected the country’s local, affordable and accessible foodshed.[2]

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An urban farmer in Havana makes the most of salvaged objects, reusing a soda bottle for sowing and roofing tiles as planter bed material. Photo: Andy Cook

Havana has become an exemplary model of this new self-provisioning, a precedent that demonstrates both the opportunities and obstacles for the transference of urban agriculture to other regions. The city has more than two million people, many universal infrastructural elements, and an urban form more like New Orleans than other cities in the Caribbean. Havana provides an example of a systematic approach to rethinking urban landscapes for more productive means: food production infrastructure has been woven into the city fabric, with interventions that range in size from backyard gardens to large peri-urban farms.[3] More importantly, the Cuban government bolsters these urban growing efforts with training and support, hosting many dozens of subsidised agricultural stores, three compost production sites, seven artisanal pesticide labs and 40 urban veterinary clinics.[4] This combination of top-down state support and ground-up citizen participation has proven wildly successful; economist Sinan Koont estimates that ‘more than 35,000 hectares of land are being used in urban agriculture in Havana’.[5]

Urban agriculture in Havana occurs at a host of different scales, from the balcony garden to the multi-hectare fields that comprise Havana’s greenbelt. Havana’s urban gardens typically produce food for human and animal consumption, although the same formal structure of gardens also supports the production of compost, biofuels and animal husbandry. Many of these gardens have emerged somewhat opportunistically from vacant and blighted properties within the city, exploiting usufruct rights (free land provided by the government) to seize available space.

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Nearly 8,000 parcelas, or small lot gardens, are found in Havana today. Photo: Andy Cook

Havana’s urban growers take this work seriously, and have transformed underused urban spaces into exceptionally productive spaces. On one rooftop in the El Cerro neighbourhood, a single farmer raises 40 guinea pigs, six chickens, two turkeys and more than a hundred rabbits. His 68 square-metre system incorporates closed-loop permaculture principles, where he grows vegetables, recycles organic animal waste, collects water and exploits a number of inter-species synergies. He has built his own machines for drying and preserving feed, which allows him to collect abundant waste compost from nearby markets and stores and put it up for leaner times. His small rooftop enterprise produces meat for area restaurants and markets; he is one of more than a thousand small livestock breeders in Havana.[6]

In an effort to introduce food production into the city, agricultural initiatives were necessarily layered over, and knitted into, existing urban fabric. From an urban design perspective, Havana’s agricultural landscapes demonstrate that productivity can be infused into hardened urban landscapes. While food security hasn’t traditionally been considered the domain of architects, landscape architects and planners, designers bring an important lens to urban agriculture, where food production must be appliquéd onto extant urban fabric.

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Havana’s urban farms have varying levels of infrastructure and investment, but much of the labor is done by hand. Photo: Andy Cook

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More than 400,000 oxen teams have replaced tractors in Cuba, and oxen are not uncommon even in city farms, including this team working the fields at the Vivero Organipónico Alamar. Photo: Andy Cook

As architects, landscape architects, planners and educators look for time-tested models addressing the sister issues of resource scarcity and food security, the progressive urban farming work stemming from Cuba’s Special Period stands out as a rare and important precedent. Widely understood to be ‘one of the most successful examples of urban agriculture in the world’, Cuban urban farming incorporates grassroots organising, the appropriation of public space for growing, and shared technical and educational support.[7] This surprisingly effective movement stands in stark contrast to other wartime or post-disaster environments, with outcomes ranging from profound self-sufficiency and widespread community engagement to environmental remediation and improved stewardship. Moreover, this Cuban model highlights a number of infrastructural, social and political features that could be applied to other areas.

Indeed, the urban agriculture practised in Havana provides an important model for any city transitioning towards food independence. As climate change intensifies and energy, land and water reserves diminish, many see the value in a return to local economies and the development of more resilient food systems. Cuba’s model – affordable, accessible, comprehensive, and de facto organic – could be particularly instructive for other nations seeking improved food security.

With natural and man-made disasters increasing in both frequency and severity, architects, landscape architects and planners can help cities to plan for resilience by identifying replicable methods for self-sufficiency. Cuba presents a useful case study because the country has endured a food crisis and has thrived: the model urban farming programmes under way in Cuba demonstrate 25 years of self-sufficiency and food security in an oil-scarce environment. And while Cuba was forced to innovate due to the food crisis of 1989, other countries have the opportunity to develop their own self-sufficiency before such a crisis unfolds.

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This urban farmer also has chickens, turkeys, guinea pigs, and vegetable production on his rooftop. Photo: Andy Cook

13.Rooftop

Reusing soda bottles for watering devices, and using permaculture techniques for animal husbandry on his rooftop, this El Cerro farmer tends to more than one hundred rabbits. Photo: Andy Cook

Image

References
D Acosta, ‘HEALTH-CUBA: Pigs Out of Havana, Orders Castro’, Inter Press Service, accessed 12 March, 2002, at: http://ipsnews2.wpengine.com/2002/03/he ... rs-castro/

M Altieri, F Funes-Monzote, ‘The Paradox of Cuban Agriculture’, in Monthly Review, accessed 1.4.2014 at: http://monthlyreview.org/2012/01/01/the ... griculture

C Clouse, Farming Cuba: Urban Agriculture from the Ground Up, New York: Princeton Architectural Press (2014)

MC Cruz, R Medina, Agriculture in the City, A Key to Sustainability in Havana, Cuba, Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle Publishers (2003)

F Funes Monzote and R Sánchez, ‘Small Livestock in the City’, LEISA Magazine, September 2005.

M González Novo et al, Testimonios: Agricultura Urbana en Ciudad de La Habana, Havana, Cuba: Asociación Cubana de Técnicos Agrícolas y Forestales (2008)

S Koont, ‘The Urban Agriculture of Havana’, in Monthly Review, vol 60, issue 08 (2009)

C Lesher, ‘Urban Agriculture: A Literature Review’, Beltsville, Maryland: Alternative Farming Systems Information Center (2008)

L Martin, ‘Transforming the Cuban Countryside: Property, Markets, and Technological Change’, eds F

Funes, L García, M Bourque, N Pérez, P Rosset, Sustainable Agriculture and Resistance: Transforming Food Production in Cuba, Oakland, CA: Food First Books (2002)

Bill McKibben, ‘The Cuba Diet’, Harper’s Magazine, April 2005

OA Mirrelles, ‘Misión al 2007’, Agricultura Orgánica 12, no 2 (2006)

K Peters, ‘Creating a Sustainable Urban Agricultural Revolution’, Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation 25, no 1 (2010)

A Premat, Sowing Change, The Making of Havana’s Urban Agriculture. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press (2012)

P Rosset, M Benjamin, The Greening of the Revolution, Cuba’s Experiment with Organic Agriculture, Melbourne, Australia: Ocean Press (2002)

C Waldheim, ‘Notes Towards a History of Agrarian Urbanism’, in Bracket 1: On Farming, Barcelona: Actar (2010)

R Weller, ‘An Art of Instrumentality, Thinking Through Landscape Urbanism’, ed Waldheim, The Landscape Urbanism Reader. New York: Princeton Architectural Press (2006)

Endnotes
1. McKibben, 2005, p62.

2. Like a watershed that feeds water into a specific area, a foodshed is a geographic region that produces the food that a particular population depends upon.

3. Today the Cuban government has identified hundreds of large state-sponsored urban farms, 162 school gardens, 7,848 vacant lot gardens, and 34,970 yard gardens (González, 2008, p24).

4. González, 2008, p24.

5. Koont, 2009, p1.

6. Funes Monzote and Sánchez, 2005.

7. Koont, 2009, p1.

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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Sun Sep 30, 2018 8:13 pm

Cuba Has A Lung Cancer Vaccine, And Now It Could Be Coming To The USA


Cuba launched the world's first lung cancer vaccine, Cimavax, to the public back in 2011. Each shot costs about $1, but the Cuban government has made the vaccine available to the public for free. Now it's 2015, and other countries are starting to get curious and want to get their hands on it too.

The Center of Molecular Immunology, Cuba, has finalized agreements with the Roswell Park Cancer Institute, USA, to embark on a project that aims to develop a lung cancer vaccine that was first made in Cuba and begin to introduce it into the United States. This will involve gaining Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for the vaccine and starting clinical trials.

This collaboration is exciting news. For 55 years, there has been a trade embargo led by the U.S. that's restricted Cuban travel and commerce. The Obama administration has been trying to normalize relations with Cuba, starting with lifting restrictions on research and medical equipment. Overcoming the embargo is the first step to creating forerunning medical collaborations such as this one.

“The chance to evaluate a vaccine like this is a very exciting prospect,” says Candace Johnson, CEO of Roswell Park. There's plenty to be excited about: Usually cancer vaccines are very expensive, but Cimavax is relatively cheap to produce and store. Patients who have cancer vaccines are also often plagued with side effects; the Cimavax, however, has shown little toxicity. Side effects to the vaccine so far have included nausea, chills, and fever.

While Cimavax is not a cure for cancer—and further testing will have to be done to truly understand the vaccine—the current results are promising. For example, a trial found a trend towards improved survival in all vaccinated patients, and a further two found the same in those whose immune systems responded well. And you have to admit, there's a sort of delicious irony that a country famous for its cigars are the world pioneers in an innovative lung cancer vaccine.

The vaccine contains a protein called epidermal growth factor (EGF). EGF, which stimulates the growth of cells, is found naturally in the body, but cancerous tumors can stimulate the body into producing too much of this protein. This causes the tumor to multiply and grow uncontrollably.

When vaccinated, EGF, among other compounds, enters the bloodstream of the patient and encourages the immune system to produce antibodies that suppress the effects of EGF. This prevents tumors from getting bigger, but doesn't directly attack them.

This vaccine is given to people who already have lung cancer. It isn't like a measles vaccine that is given to an infant who can then expect never to suffer from the disease. Known as a therapeutic vaccine, it is given to patients who already have cancerous tumors in their lungs. Cimavax inhibits their growth and stops them from spreading, or metastasizing, to other parts of the body, which makes treatment significantly more difficult.

While this vaccine was developed, and is currently only licensed, for lung cancer, researchers are hopeful that it could be used for other cancers. That's because rogue epidermal growth factor signaling doesn't just stimulate the development of tumors in the lungs; it is also known to play a role in prostate, breast, colon and pancreatic cancer. “All those things are potential targets for this vaccine,” says Kelvin Lee, an immunologist at Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

The current embargo between the U.S. and Cuba has been modified to make research collaborations such as this one possible. But for collaborative research to take off, Congress will need to make considerable changes to it. It would be an inspiring event to see the embargo dropped in the name of scientific research.

https://www.iflscience.com/health-and-m ... aboration/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Sun Sep 30, 2018 8:17 pm

Cuba Has A Lung Cancer Vaccine, And Now It Could Be Coming To The USA


Cuba launched the world's first lung cancer vaccine, Cimavax, to the public back in 2011. Each shot costs about $1, but the Cuban government has made the vaccine available to the public for free. Now it's 2015, and other countries are starting to get curious and want to get their hands on it too.

The Center of Molecular Immunology, Cuba, has finalized agreements with the Roswell Park Cancer Institute, USA, to embark on a project that aims to develop a lung cancer vaccine that was first made in Cuba and begin to introduce it into the United States. This will involve gaining Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for the vaccine and starting clinical trials.

This collaboration is exciting news. For 55 years, there has been a trade embargo led by the U.S. that's restricted Cuban travel and commerce. The Obama administration has been trying to normalize relations with Cuba, starting with lifting restrictions on research and medical equipment. Overcoming the embargo is the first step to creating forerunning medical collaborations such as this one.

“The chance to evaluate a vaccine like this is a very exciting prospect,” says Candace Johnson, CEO of Roswell Park. There's plenty to be excited about: Usually cancer vaccines are very expensive, but Cimavax is relatively cheap to produce and store. Patients who have cancer vaccines are also often plagued with side effects; the Cimavax, however, has shown little toxicity. Side effects to the vaccine so far have included nausea, chills, and fever.

While Cimavax is not a cure for cancer—and further testing will have to be done to truly understand the vaccine—the current results are promising. For example, a trial found a trend towards improved survival in all vaccinated patients, and a further two found the same in those whose immune systems responded well. And you have to admit, there's a sort of delicious irony that a country famous for its cigars are the world pioneers in an innovative lung cancer vaccine.

The vaccine contains a protein called epidermal growth factor (EGF). EGF, which stimulates the growth of cells, is found naturally in the body, but cancerous tumors can stimulate the body into producing too much of this protein. This causes the tumor to multiply and grow uncontrollably.

When vaccinated, EGF, among other compounds, enters the bloodstream of the patient and encourages the immune system to produce antibodies that suppress the effects of EGF. This prevents tumors from getting bigger, but doesn't directly attack them.

This vaccine is given to people who already have lung cancer. It isn't like a measles vaccine that is given to an infant who can then expect never to suffer from the disease. Known as a therapeutic vaccine, it is given to patients who already have cancerous tumors in their lungs. Cimavax inhibits their growth and stops them from spreading, or metastasizing, to other parts of the body, which makes treatment significantly more difficult.

While this vaccine was developed, and is currently only licensed, for lung cancer, researchers are hopeful that it could be used for other cancers. That's because rogue epidermal growth factor signaling doesn't just stimulate the development of tumors in the lungs; it is also known to play a role in prostate, breast, colon and pancreatic cancer. “All those things are potential targets for this vaccine,” says Kelvin Lee, an immunologist at Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

The current embargo between the U.S. and Cuba has been modified to make research collaborations such as this one possible. But for collaborative research to take off, Congress will need to make considerable changes to it. It would be an inspiring event to see the embargo dropped in the name of scientific research.

https://www.iflscience.com/health-and-m ... aboration/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Thu Oct 18, 2018 11:42 am

Permanent Representative of Cuba to the UN, Anayansi Rodríguez Camejo, denounces new anti-Cuban action
This Tuesday, the U.S. used the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Chamber of the United Nations to attack Cuba, in contravention of the purposes and principles of the UN Charter

Author: Granma International news | informacion@granma.cu

october 17, 2018 09:10:21

Image
Photo: Permanent Mission of Cuba to the United Nations

TODAY, Tuesday 16 October, 2018, the United States of America has once again sullied the name of the United Nations.

The United States, in another action of contempt for human rights and this Organization, has preferred to create absurd lies about Cuba rather than recognize and promote a campaign to redress its multiple human rights violations, both in its territory and in the rest of the world.

With this action, which included the use of the ECOSOC Chamber and the United Nations WebCast, the name and emblem of the Organization was used in an act against a Member State, on the pretense of international support for its fallacious campaign. All of this contravenes the principles and purposes of the Charter.

It is clear the intention of the United States Government to sustain, with all available resources and without the slightest moral objection, the unilateral policy of economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed against Cuba and universally repudiated by the United Nations General Assembly for its criminal and genocidal nature, and therefore, in violation of international law.

This event is a new chapter in the long list of aggressions against Cuba. It is part of the actions aimed at subverting the legitimately established constitutional order and of the interventionist agenda that has gained renewed momentum under the current Administration, whose fascist, racist and xenophobic ideas are a matter of grave concern in the international community.

Cuba has warned about and denounced this situation by means of a letter of protest to the Secretary-General, requesting the cancellation of this farce of the United States Government within the United Nations premises. We are supported on the Charter of the United Nations and the existing rules concerning the use of conference rooms, approved by this Organization.

The event, as we had foreseen, was a political comedy staged on false arguments and with supporting actors of a dark history at the service of a foreign power, many of them paid by Washington, including the Secretary-General of the puppet Organization of American States.

The sponsors of the alleged campaign were not willing to listen to Cuba's truth. They even tried to prevent Cuban diplomatic officials from entering the room. What happened is the total and absolute responsibility of the United States.

Cuba's voice was heard despite everything. They could not give us valid arguments, they did not have them. The truth is on our side.

Cuba is proud of its human rights record, which denies any manipulation against it. The United States lacks the morals to give lessons, and much less in this matter. That country, with its poor adherence to international human rights instruments, has a pattern of systematic violations of all human rights, including the use of torture, detention and arbitrary deprivation of liberty, as is the case of the Guantánamo Naval Base, an illegally occupied Cuban territory; the murder of African-Americans by police officers; the death of innocent civilians by their intervention and occupation forces; xenophobia and repression; the imprisonment of immigrants, including children who are separated from their families. The latter, the imprisonment of children, would have rightly justified the name "Jailed for What?.

Cuba condemns and rejects in the strongest possible terms this new anti-Cuban action by the United States Government, which constitutes an affront to the sovereignty of the Cuban people and disrespect for their self-determination. This is an attack not only on a sovereign State, but also on the principles of multilateralism and the foundational bases of the United Nations.

http://en.granma.cu/cuba/2018-10-17/per ... ban-action
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Re: Cuba

Post by blindpig » Mon Oct 22, 2018 1:23 pm

A new constitution for Cuba
Written by __ on 7th October 2018

Social property will be the main basis for production in Cuba after the adoption next year of a new constitution, and this will continue to be the governing principle of the country’s social and economic life.

This was the main message of the Cuban deputy minister of foreign affairs, Ana Teresita González Fraga, when she addressed a gathering of friends of Cuba in Dublin last month. The minister is on a tour of a number of European and Asian countries to inform solidarity groups, and Cubans abroad, of some recent developments.

She spoke about the new draft constitution, containing 224 articles, 87 of which are new provisions. It envisages the updating of the social and economic model of Cuban society, emphasising the socialist nature of the Cuban political system. There will be some private production, but the dominant means of production will be socially owned.

It is intended to establish a five-year presidency, with a limit of two terms. There will be a maximum age of sixty for candidates. There will also be a prime minister, who will co-ordinate the work of the Council of Ministers.

The draft has been discussed in detail at 135,000 local meetings, and Cubans living abroad have also been consulted. This debate process will end on 15 November, and the final vote will be taken in February 2019.

The minister thanked supporters and friends of Cuba in Ireland for their solidarity, and recalled the visit of President Higgins to Cuba in 2017. She thanked especially all those who campaigned for the release of the Cuban Five.

She said there had been a sudden and serious deterioration in relations with the United States since the election of President Trump. The blockade has been strengthened, particularly in the field of financial and economic transactions. As it has done for many years, the UN General Assembly has again passed a resolution against the blockade.

In 2016 Cuba signed an agreement on political and economic co-operation with the European Union, and an EU-Cuba Council has been established to set out a “road map” for future relations. This agreement is dependent on ratification by the parliaments of the member-states.

Cuba is very concerned about the aggression and external intervention aimed at the Bolivarian government of Venezuela. The minister said the situation in Nicaragua was also a source of concern, stressing that the sovereignty of Venezuela and Nicaragua is essential for stability in the region.

https://socialistvoice.ie/2018/10/a-new ... -for-cuba/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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