[NYTr] News Summary from RHC - July 5, 2005
http://olm.blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/Week-of-Mon-20050704/019548.html
News Summary from Radio Havana Cuba - July 5, 2005
* Former Irish Political Prisoner Vows to Help Free the Cuban Five
* Cuba Hosts International Mayors' Conference
* Cuba Reports on Efforts to Improve Electricity Grid
* Ukraine Thanks Cuba for Ongoing Medical Aid to Chernobyl Children
* Cuba-Namibia Joint Commission Meeting Kicks off in Havana
* Cuba Relations, Common Market and Haiti at CARICOM Summit
* Pre-School Education Conference Slated for Cuba
* Cuban Fire Festival Unites Caribbean Cultural Proponents
* Cucalambe Festival Winds Up in Eastern Province of Las Tunas
* Protesters Clash with Security Forces Ahead of G-8 Summit
* US Veterans' Group Issues "Declaration of Impeachment"
* Pinochet Again Rushed to Hospital Just Before Immunity Hearing
* Pentagon Reviews "Two-War Strategy"
* Kissinger Apologizes for Calling Indira Gandhi a "Bitch"
* Editorial - Africa Reminds the World's Richest of its Plight
Former Irish Political Prisoner Vows to Help Free the Cuban Five
Havana, July 5, (RHC) - Willie Gallagher, an Irish ex-political
prisoner who has served many years in prison for his political
activities in the North of Ireland, today promised to do all he can to
bring the five Cuban political prisoners back from US jails to their
own country. The Five are serving long sentences in prisons scattered
all over the United States for infiltrating terrorist groups in Miami.
The Irishman was speaking at a meeting this morning in the
International Julio Antonio Mella camp where more than 300 members of
the José Martà European International Work Brigade attended a meeting
to listen to members of the families of the Cuban Five relate their
experiences about the case of their five relatives.
Willie Gallagher said that he could personally relate to the suffering
of the five men because of his own experiences in British jails in
Northern Ireland. He also pointed out that moral and financial support
for the men's families is crucial.
Members of this year's International work brigade, organized by the
Cuban friendship Institute, numbers more than 300 people from 22
different European countries who spend the month of July in Cuba doing
agricultural and construction work.
Cuba Hosts International Mayors' Conference
Santiago de Cuba, July 5 (RHC)-- Mayors from 11 countries converged on
Cuba's second largest city on Monday for the fourth meeting of mayors
in support of Santiago de Cuba.
Ain news agency reports that the visiting municipal officials hail
from Mexico, the US, Spain, Martinique, France, Italy, Portugal,
Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador and Jamaica.
The head of the Santiago municipal government, Luis Enrique Ibanez,
said, "Our identity is a mixture of African, Ibero-American, Caribbean
and French origin, whose cultures have been transmitted from
generation to generation and enrich the culture of the Cuban people."
The Cuban official added that solidarity and goodwill characterizes
the meeting, reaffirming that there are no inferior or superior
cultures.
A stamp bearing a painting of Santiago's first mayor La Jura de Hernan
Cortes, by Rodolfo Hernandez Giro, was cancelled during the
inauguration. Meanwhile, two pieces by Spanish sculptor Antonio
Grediaga are showing at the Barcardi Museum and the
artist was on hand for the opening.
Convened on the 490th anniversary of the founding of Santiago de Cuba
in July 1515, the Mayors gathering takes place through Saturday, and
coincides with celebrations for the 25th Caribbean Fire Festival.
Among the topics on the meeting agenda are cooperation as a tool of
solidarity, development of ecotourism, ecosystem conservation and the
urban environment, and a gender focus in social policies.
The program includes tours of key social projects of the Revolution
and other places of historic and economic interests. The signing of
sister city relationships between Santiago de Cuba and other cities is
another important aspect of the gathering.
Cuba Reports on Efforts to Improve Electricity Grid
Havana, July 5 (RHC--) Cuba's National Electrical System will improve
its capacity and reliability in the coming weeks, said Yadira Garcia,
Minister of the Basic Industry, on Monday evening's The Round Table
television and radio program.
According to AIN News Agency during the prime time broadcast, several
National Electrical System executives, engineers and power plant
directors emphasized that by the end of July, the national electricity
peak demand should be met, and that by August the system could be
operating in a stable condition.
However, Eng. Yadira Garcia alerted that while the maintenance
schedules remain on course there is still the risk of unforeseen
problems and breakdowns.
The minister detailed the complex situation that the National
Electrical System was facing after several of the most important
thermoelectric generating stations went off line including the Antonio
Maceo (Rente) in Santiago de Cuba, and the Felton in Holguin.
Breakdowns at the Nuevitas "10 de Octubre" power station and the 300
MW "Antonio Guiteras" Matanzas plant greatly reduced the power
generating capacity over the past weekend, resulting in extensive
power cuts throughout the island. The Antonio Guiteras went back on
line after a 27-hour interruption.
Since April the nation's top specialists and hundreds of workers of
the National Electrical Corporation and other government agencies are
working around the clock to get as many generators as possible back on
line and alleviate the emergency that arose from the combination of
breakdowns and scheduled maintenance operations.
Eng. Pedro Abigantus, the National Electrical Corporation Director of
Power Generation, explained on The Round Table the importance of
observing the maintenance schedules so generating units can produce
energy more efficiently and breakdowns are reduced.
Another executive, Livan Arrote, who heads the Electromechanical
Division of the National Electrical Corporation, said the current
maintenance to 10 power stations should end the worrisome voltage
fluctuations caused by unstable operations.
Vicente de la O Levy, Director General of the National Electrical
Corporation, highlighted the actions in progress to assure a more
efficient power generating system. These include investments to add
more than 190 MW of generating capacity by way of turbines fed from
natural gas extracted from the oil fields east of the city of Havana.
Eng. Garcia also explained that whenever there is a breakdown at a
power generating station, the ministry designates a technical
committee of specialists who analyze the causes. She added that so far
they have found no signs of poor operating practices or deliberate
attempts to sabotage the plants.
Ukraine Thanks Cuba for Ongoing Medical Aid to Chernobyl Children
Havana, July 5 (RHC)-- Ukraine Health Ministry official Raisa Moisenko
thanked Cuba on Monday in Havana for the medical assistance given to
two generations of children affected by the Chernobyl nuclear accident
in 1986.
AIN reports that the Ukrainian official stressed that Cuba was the
only country that extended its helping hand at such a difficult
moment. "We suffered a huge catastrophe and needed help for a
country's most precious jewel, its children," she added.
Moinsenko's statements came at the Tarara beach community east of
Havana where the treatment takes place. In an interview with Reuters
news agency she made reference to the significance of the gesture of
solidarity of the Cuban government for the patients and their
relatives.
"I want to stay here," says Sveta, a 15-year-old blue-eyed girl whose
hair and eyebrows began to grow once again after losing them from the
enormous doses of radioactivity that her parents absorbed from the
atmosphere due to the nuclear accident.
Tania Syomka, who arrived to Cuba a year ago accompanied by her
crippled daughter said, "Irina can now do what she wants, go to the
beach and the discotheque, and is now a beautiful and tall girl."
Irina required surgery that her parents could not afford to correct a
defect in the upper spinal cord.
The article notes that many of those that are receiving rehabilitation
in Tarara Beach are orphans and come from poor families that cannot
afford medical treatment in the Ukraine, where private medicine is
costly and the public health system has deteriorated since the
disappearance of the Soviet Union.
Reuters adds that since 1990 Cuba has given treatment free of charge
to 18,150 Ukrainian children that suffer from cancer, leukemia, hair
loss, skin problems and other illnesses related to the radioactivity
that was released by the nuclear reactor several years before they
were born.
The Tarara Pediatric Hospital receives up to 800 children each year
together with their parents or tutors for a minimum of two months. The
children and their guardians live in comfortable homes near the beach
where their treatment is combined with recreation.
The radioactive leak at the Chernobyl nuclear plant in 1986 is
considered the worst civil disaster of the nuclear era.
Cuba-Namibia Joint Commission Meeting Kicks off in Havana
Havana, July 5 (RHC) -- The eighth meeting of the Cuba-Namibia Joint
Commission for Economic, Scientific-Technical and Commercial
Cooperation began in Havana on Monday.
AIN News Agency reports that the session was inaugurated by Cuba's
Minister for Foreign Investment and Economic Cooperation, Marta Lomas
and Namibia's Health and Social Services Minister, Richard Nchabi on
Monday
During the meeting both sides will examine the development of
bilateral cooperation issues as a follow-up of the previous meeting
held two years ago in Namibia. New objectives will be agreed on for
the coming two years.
Lomas thanked the Namibian authorities and the community of African
states for the support given to the island in different international
forums in the fight against Washington's blockade of Cuba.
The Namibian Minister described the bilateral political relations and
cooperation as excellent. He praised the work of the 1,460 Cuban
professionals who, over a period of 15 years, have offered their
services in this African nation.
The African visitor recalled Cuba's decisive political, military and
diplomatic support for SWAPO during the liberation of Namibia.
On Monday he met with Oscar Martinez Cordovez, Deputy Head of
International Relations of the Central Committee of Cuba's Communist
Party, and will visit health centers in Havana and the Biotechnology
Centre.
There are currently 208 Cuban professionals working in Namibia, mainly
medical personnel. Education, agriculture, culture and fishing are
among other sectors of Cuba-Namibia cooperation.
Cuba Relations, Common Market and Haiti at CARICOM Summit
Havana, July 5 (RHC) -- Strategies to strengthen relations between
Cuba and the Caribbean Community were on the agenda at the 26th
CARICOM Summit of Heads of State, which win finishesTuesday on the
island of Saint Lucia.
According to AIN News Agency, the Caribbean leaders agreed that
establishing CARICOM as an economic, political and social bloc
continues to advance with joint actions by member countries to set up
a common market and economy in the area.
The initiative, which stipulates a free flow of professional services
and capital around the region, is scheduled to take effect by January
2006.
Dominica Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit recalled the regional
commitment to boost the common market, noting that important decisions
must be taken in order to advance.
Regarding the continuing crisis in Haiti, the CARICOM summit said it
does not recognize that country's interim government, established
following a coup against constitutionally elected president Jean
Bertrand Aristide in February 2004.
The Caribbean leaders agreed on the need to help Haiti recover social
stability and called for a probe into the causes of the current
instability in the most impoverished nation in the Western Hemisphere.
CARICOM member nations: Antigua and Barbuda, The Bahamas, Barbados,
Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Montserrat, Saint LucÃa, Saint
Kitts and Nevis, Saint Vicente and the Grenadines, Surinam and
Trinidad and Tobago have a total population of 14 million inhabitants.
Pre-School Education Conference Slated for Cuba
Havana, July 5 (RHC) -- Approaches to quality education for infants
and younger children, as well as the role of teachers, are some of the
issues to be addressed at the seventh International Meeting on
Pre-School Education from July 10-15 in Cuba.
According to AIN News Agency, the sponsor of the event, the World
Organization of Pre-School Education, is active in over 70 countries
and promotes the well-being and development of children under 8 years
of age.
Among the objectives on the conference is to overview the current
state of early education and pre-school in today's world, exchange
experiences on the different ways of organizing and evaluating the
educational process, and discuss ways of promoting alternatives of
home educational assistance.
Silverio said that the opening ceremony of the conference will be held
at Havana's Museum of Fine Arts, while the scientific program will get
underway on July 13 at the city's convention centre with the
participation of representatives from 34 nations.
Hilda Perez, secretary of the organizing committee, pointed out that
as part of the program, participants will visit local government
offices, day care centres, offices of the
program "Educate Your Child," and various provinces across the island.
Cuban Fire Festival Unites Caribbean Cultural Proponents
Guantanamo, July 5 (RHC)-- Along streets teeming with music, folkloric
paintings, and theatrical and literary expositions, Cuban and foreign
cultural delegations took part in the annual "Fire Festival," hosted
by the eastern Cuban cities of Guantanamo and Santiago de Cuba.
According to AIN News Agency, taking part in the festivities are close
to ten foreign groups - including those from Mexico, Venezuela and the
Dominican Republic - as well as three national organizations and over
20 groups from the eastern part of the island, made up of both
professional and amateur associations.
With an international, artistic and academic character, the Caribbean
festival holds annual exchanges on various issues - among them
religion, cultural heritages and the region's economy.
In the international colloquium "The Caribbean That Unites Us,"
participants will reflect on the common roots and peculiarities of
their respective nations, and will discuss the diversity of artistic
expressions in the region.
Sponsored by the Caribbean House and the Cuban Ministry of Culture,
this year's festival is being dedicated to Venezuela and to the one
hundredth anniversary of the Tumba Francesa - a legacy of Haitian
heritage in Cuba.
Cucalambe Festival Winds Up in Eastern Province of Las Tunas
Las Tunas, July 5 (RHC) -- The 38th Cucalambe Festival -a cultural
event dedicated to rural music and poetry- concluded on Sunday in
Cuba's eastern province of Las Tunas.
Cucalambe was the pseudonym used by Juan Cristobal Napoles Fajardo, a
19thcentury local bard who has been considered among the best
exponents of Cuban rural poetry.
As part of the celebration several renowned Ibero-American scholars
met to debate the development of improvised verse and the 'Decima,' an
Hispanic poetical composition characterized by ten-line stanzas and a
peculiar rhyme pattern.
Considering the longtime tradition of that poetical form in this
territory and the work that has been carried out to promote it, the
participants agreed to declare Las Tunas, the 'Decima' world capital
for a year.
Other artistic expressions such as dance and painting were also
featured during the festival.
Next year's event will be dedicated to the Dominican Republic,
Camagüey Province and Maria Teresa Linares, National Music Prize
laureate.
Protesters Clash with Security Forces Ahead of G-8 Summit
Edinburgh, July 5 (RHC)-- Protesters clashed with police while other
demonstrators blocked access to a British naval base ahead of the G-8
summit, slated to get underway tomorrow, Wednesday, in Edinburgh,
Scotland.
As the heads of state of the world's richest nations prepared to meet,
anti-globalization demonstrators in the Scottish capital turned up the
heat on Monday. Police arrested more than 60 protesters in downtown
Edinburgh and reportedly detained a number of other demonstrators at
the Faslane Naval Base -- Britain's main nuclear submarine base --
where nearly 1000 activists blocked the gates in and out of the
facility.
Security forces and riot police have been on alert for the protests,
which took place two days after more than 200,000 marched peacefully
in Edinburgh to demand strong initiatives by the Group of Eight to
counter poverty in Africa. More than 10,000 police, many imported from
other parts of Britain, are deployed at Gleneagles and elsewhere in
Scotland this week in the biggest security operation ever mounted in
Britain for an international summit.
The three-day meeting of G-8 countries -- Britain, Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States -- is to discuss
joint steps to combat extreme poverty in Africa as well as ways to
deal with climate change.
This week's protests, designed to pressure the G-8 leaders to make a
commitment to tackle poverty, coincided with a series of concerts in
cities around the world, called "Live 8" -- with hundreds of thousands
attending the huge musical events. Concerts took place from Tokyo to
London to Philadelphia. Another Live 8 concert is set for Edinburgh on
Wednesday.
US Veterans' Group Issues "Declaration of Impeachment"
St. Louis, July 5 (RHC)-- A US veterans' organization on Monday issued
a "Declaration of Impeachment" on the occasion of the Fourth of July,
Independence Day. Veterans for Peace (VfP) also announced it is
beginning an on-line petition campaign to remove President George W.
Bush from office for crimes committed during the invasion and
occupation of Iraq.
Using the same language as the original "Declaration of Independence,"
the veterans group cited many of the same reasons to remove Bush that
Thomas Jefferson used to separate from King George of England.
"The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of
repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the
establishment of an absolute Tyranny," Jefferson wrote, and then added
the famous litany of abuses charged against the king that Veterans for
Peace said is unchanged today:
"He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to
the Civil power.
"He has - deprive(ed) us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by
Jury - transport(ed) us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended
offences.
"He has constrained our fellow Citizens - to become the executioners
of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.
"He is at this time transporting large Armies - to compleat the works
of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of
Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and
totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.
"A (President) whose character is thus marked by every act which may
define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people."
The veterans' Declaration of Impeachment came to the same conclusion
as Jefferson's Declaration of Independence, when it declared: "It is
the Right of the People - it is their duty, to throw off such
Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security."
VfP president Dave Cline, a decorated Vietnam combat veteran, said:
"Today's tyrant named George may have little regard for the
Constitution, but as members of the military we took an oath to uphold
that document. George Bush has repeatedly violated not only the
Constitution but federal law, by invading and occupying Iraq. In our
system, the remedy for such high crimes is clear: he must be
impeached."
The president of the veterans' organization invited individuals to
check out the "Declaration of Impeachment" and the VfP's documented
case for removing George W. Bush by going to: VeteransForPeace.org.
Veterans For Peace is a national organization founded in 1985. It has
123 chapters across the United States.
Pinochet Again Rushed to Hospital Just Before Immunity Hearing
Santiago de Chile, July 5 (RHC)-- Former Chilean dictator Augusto
Pinochet has been rushed to a hospital in Santiago de Chile and is
apparently undergoing medical tests. Political commentators noted that
it was quite convenient for Pinochet to go into the hospital just one
day before a hearing to determine whether or not to strip him of
immunity from prosecution on murder charges.
The 89-year-old former dictator reportedly suffered a stroke last
month and an earlier one in May. On Monday, he was taken to the
Santiago Military Hospital after complaining of dizziness and pains.
The Santiago Appeals Court is scheduled to hold a hearing tomorrow,
Wednesday, on whether to strip Pinochet of his immunity from
prosecution on charges of involvement in the abduction and killing of
political prisoners during what his intelligence services dubbed
"Operation Colombo."
Pinochet seized power in a bloody military coup in September 1973 that
overthrew constitutionally-elected President Salvador Allende. During
his reign, which lasted until 1990, thousands of Chileans were
tortured and disappeared.
Last month, a Chilean court lifted Pinochet's immunity from
prosecution for fraud, but said he should not stand trial on human
rights charges for his role in a conspiracy of South American
right-wing military dictatorships.
Operation Colombo became public in 1975 when the bodies of 119 members
of the Movement for a Revolutionary Left (MIR) were found in Argentina
and Brazil. The Chilean military dictatorship tried to say that they
were killed in an internal dispute, but the blame was clearly pinned
on the Pinochet regime itself.
The retired army general, a symbol of repression who has driven a deep
political rift through Chile for more than 30 years, has never been
tried in connection with the thousands who were killed or disappeared
under his brutal rule.
Pentagon Reviews "Two-War Strategy"
Washington, July 5 (RHC)-- The Pentagon is reportedly weighing a
change in its military strategy of being ready to fight two major wars
at once. According to The New York Times, the so-called "two-war
strategy" is limiting the military's ability to deal with other
'trouble spots' around the world.
In their Quadrennial Defense Review mandated by Congress, top military
planners are aware that maintaining troops in Afghanistan and Iraq has
bogged down their forces. The New York Times reports that for the
first time in decades, the Pentagon is seriously questioning the
wisdom of the two-war strategy.
Unnamed Defense Department officials say that the US military's
invasion and occupation of Iraq have completely upset the central
concept of the two-war model. One anonymous Pentagon official said
that after years of saying US forces could fight two conflicts
simultaneously, the military has now come to the realization that it
simply cannot.
Civilian and military officials are trying to decide to what degree to
acknowledge that operations like Iraq -- which are prolonged military
commitments and not conventional wars -- may be such a burden that it
would not be possible to also fight two full-scale campaigns
elsewhere.
The Defense Review, which is not due to be submitted to the US
Congress until early next year, notes that two-war strategies argue
for more high-technology weapons, particularly warplanes -- as opposed
to ground troops used in military occupations.
Kissinger Apologizes for Calling Indira Gandhi a "Bitch"
Washington, July 5 (RHC)-- Former US Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger has expressed regret over anti-India comments he made to
former US President Richard Nixon in November 1971. It was recently
revealed that Kissinger called former Indian Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi a "bitch" during the conversation.
According to declassified documents from the US State Department,
Kissinger told Nixon that "the Indians are bastards." During the same
conversation between the US president and his secretary of state,
shortly after a meeting with the visiting Indira Gandhi, Nixon said:
"We really slobbered over the old witch." Kissinger responded: "While
she was a bitch, we got what we wanted, too."
Now, some 34 years later, the 82-year-old Kissinger told reporters he
was just "letting off steam" at the end of a meeting in which he and
Nixon were saying that they had gone out of their way to treat Gandhi
very cordially during an official visit to the United States.
Kissinger tried to excuse the conversation, calling it "Nixon
language." But India's ruling Congress Party is quite upset, saying
"it is shocking that the head of state of a country and his principal
adviser chose to use such intemperate language against a popularly
elected prime minister of another country."
Editorial
Africa Reminds the World's Richest of its Plight
Shortly before the opening of the meeting of the world's seven richest
nations plus Russia, African leaders met in Libya to send a loud and
clear message to the G-8 stressing that cancelling the debt of a group
of countries is not enough to alleviate poverty on the poorest
continent.
The fifth ordinary session of the African Union's annual assembly is
underway in the northern Libyan city of Sirte, where the leaders of 53
countries frequently hold conflicting positions. But one thing they
agree on is that the cancellation of the foreign debt of 14 nations of
the continent is a meager solution.
The decision was previously announced by the European Union and by the
exclusive group of the richest nations. However, Africans insist that,
if the industrialized North wants to help, it should multiply its
initiatives.
It is true that British Prime Minister Tony Blair designed a project
that he will present at the G-8 meeting in Scotland on Wednesday, to
create a 25-billion dollar fund by 2010 and an assistance mechanism
for development.
Although some African leaders say that the British offer gives new
hope, others demand fair international trade rules. As some of the
speakers in Sirte have noted, the economy of most African countries is
based on agriculture and disloyal trade - or the high subsidies paid
by the United States and the Europeans to their producers - must end.
Thus, US and European agricultural exports are more competitive than
those of Africa, which lack official subvention.
In addition, the leaders of the African states also recalled that they
are still waiting for the fulfillment of the objectives of the
millennium for development, announced five years ago by the United
Nations. Africa is still far from reaching those goals which include
reducing poverty by half by 2015, guaranteeing primary education for
all children, reducing by two thirds the mortality rate of children
under five years of age and fighting AIDS, malaria and other diseases.
Africa is currently undergoing a serious crisis because 320 of its 800
million inhabitants live in abject poverty and AIDS kills two million
people every year. Too busy coping with wars that originated from
their former colonial status, Africans barely have time to coordinate
actions and positions but, at least, they can remind the rich that 30
years ago they promised to help Africa with 0.7% of their Gross
Domestic Product, but unfortunately, only a few have kept that
promise.
compiled by NY Transfer from http://www.radiohc.cu
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Pentagon Reviews "Two-War Strategy"
Editorial
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