Nov 19, 2008 

Guardian.uk: China's President Latin America tour cements Beijing's trade clout

For the complete report from The Guardian click on this link

China's President Latin America tour cements Beijing's trade clout

China's president, Hu Jintao, is leading scores of Chinese business people on a sweep through Latin America to reinforce Beijing's growing economic clout in the region. Hu launched free trade talks on a visit to Costa Rica, before flying to a rapturous reception in Cuba. This week he will also be one of the stars at a Pacific rim summit of 21 nations in Peru. By then, Beijing's delegation will have grown to 600 people, including 12 ministers."China's relations with Latin America and the Caribbean have never been so close," Hu told Peru's El Comercio newspaper. In contrast to Russia's politically charged push into the region - which involves selling arms and challenging US influence - Beijing's focus is on agriculture, raw materials and markets for its exports.

Labels: , , , , ,

| |

Oct 24, 2008 

Xinhua: Cuba, EU re-establish cooperative ties

For the complete report from the Xinhua click on this link

Cuba, EU re-establish cooperative ties

Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque and European Commissioner of Development and Humanitarian Aid, Louis Michel, signed a declaration on Thursday to restore the bilateral cooperation at the headquarters of the Cuban Foreign Ministry in Havana. During the meeting both sides hailed the restoration of the bilateral ties, which are based on the principle of reciprocal and non-discriminatory treatment, with respect for each other's sovereignty. Michel said he was pleased with the agreement, and reaffirmed the European Union (EU)'s intentions to strengthen ties with Cuba. He also announced an emergency aid worth 2 million euros (2.6 million U.S. dollars) to help Cuba recover from hurricanes Gustav and Ike, which have produced more than 5 billion dollars in losses.

The EU will also provide 25 million to 30 million euros (32.5 million and 39 million dollars) to Cuba from next year to rebuild schools and damaged houses.

Labels: ,

| |

Jul 21, 2008 

RIA Novosti - Russian combat aircraft could return to Cuba


For the complete report from the RIA Novosti click on this link

Russian combat aircraft could return to Cuba

Russian combat aircraft could return to Cuba in a bid to counter U.S. plans to deploy a missile shield in Central Europe, a Russian daily reported on Monday. Moscow has strongly opposed the possible deployment by the U.S. of 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and an accompanying radar in the Czech Republic as a threat to its national security. Washington says the defenses are needed to deter a possible strike from Iran, or other "rogue" states. "While they are deploying the missile shield in Poland and the Czech Republic, our strategic bombers will already be landing in Cuba," a high-placed military aviation source told the Izvestia newspaper.

Labels: , , ,

| |

Jun 20, 2008 

Deutsche Welle: EU Defies US, Lifts Sanctions on Cuba

EU Defies US, Lifts Sanctions on Cuba | Europe | Deutsche Welle | 20.06.2008

The foreign ministers of the 27-nation EU bloc have agreed to scrap
sanctions against Cuba. The Caribbean country's northern neighbor is
bound to be angered by the move.


The move is expected to place Brussels and Washington on a collision course and drew criticism from Cuban dissidents.


The vote on Thursday, June 19, scrapped the sanctions that were
imposed in 2003, suspended in 2005 and are largely symbolic. They
include limits on high-level government visits and the role of EU
diplomats in Cuba's cultural events and do not approach the hard line
of the 46-year-old US sanctions, which include a trade and investment
embargo.


Labels: , ,

| |

Mar 8, 2008 

DW: Europe Warily Eyes Window of Opportunity in Cuba

For the complete report from the Deutsche Welle click on this link

Europe Warily Eyes Window of Opportunity in Cuba

Louis Michel, the European Commissioner for Development and Aid, leads an EU delegation to Cuba on Thursday, Feb. 6, to assess the political climate after the retirement of President Fidel Castro. When Fidel Castro stepped down as president of Cuba last month after 49 years in power, the main question asked by the international community was whether democratic change could be expected in the wake of his abdication. A European Union delegation travels to Havana this week to see for itself if a new climate exists where normalized ties and engagement can survive.

Labels: , ,

| |

Feb 24, 2008 

Prensa Latina: Raúl Castro Elected President of Cuba

For the complete report from the Prensa Latina click on this link

Raúl Castro Elected President of Cuba

Cuba´s National Assembly of People´s Power today elected Raul Castro Ruz as president of the Council of State for the next five years.

For the video report from liveLeak "Who is Raoul Castro click on this link

Labels: , ,

| |

Feb 19, 2008 

BBC NEWS: End of Castro's half century in power - by Michael Voss

Castro - a political icon resigns


For the complete report from the BBC click on this link

End of Castro's half century in power - by Michael Voss

The news that Fidel Castro is stepping down as president after almost 50 years in power came in the middle of the night, through the online edition of the official Communist party newspaper Granma.

Under the headline "Message from the Commander in Chief", the 81-year-old revolutionary leader wrote: "I will not aspire to nor accept - I repeat, I will not aspire to nor accept - the post of President of the Council of State and Commander in Chief." This effectively marks the end of an era. Mr Castro has ruled this Caribbean island since the revolution in 1959. Most Cubans have known no other leader or system, with more than 70% of the population born after the revolution.

Mr Castro pursued an egalitarian society, with free health-care and education. Mr Castro handed temporary power to his brother Raul a year-and-a-half ago after undergoing emergency surgery. A year-and-a-half later and Raul Castro appears to be firmly in control. But in a keynote speech last year Raul Castro told the nation that "structural and conceptual" changes were needed to get the island's faltering economy back on its feet. All of this has raised widespread expectations that major economic changes at least are on the way. In recent months Raul Castro has initiated a wide-sweeping internal debate over what changes people want to see.

Andrew Johnston from Leeds in the UK writes: "Castro led a regime that successfully looked after the basic needs of its people for 50 years, and he did it in the face of an American embargo. When one looks at the sorry state of the other countries in 'America's back-yard' one can only salute a man who was able to look after his own in defiance of the world's greatest military super-power. One of the last towering giants of politics will be lamented in this age of clown Prime Ministers and buffoon Presidents".

Labels: , , ,

| |

Feb 17, 2008 

Miami New Times- US elections - Che Guevara Spotted in Obama’s Houston Office

Miami New Times

US elections - Che Guevara Spotted in Obama’s Houston Office

Some sharp-eyed blogger at the politically conservative site "Little Green Footballs" spotted Che Guevara emblazoned on a pair of Cuban flags hanging in a Houston campaign office of Barack Obama.The sighting occurred on a segment from the local Fox affiliate, which apparently made no mention of the flags. A disclaimer on the Fox site states “The office featured in this video is funded by volunteers of the Barack Obama Campaign and is not an official headquarters for his campaign.”

Labels: , , ,

| |

Feb 10, 2008 

EU-Digest/Sun Sentinal: Cuba - Castro's fate remains in question -- Can EU Capitalize on change of power? - by Ray Sanchez

the Capitol in Havana, Cuba


For the complete report from the Sun-Sentinel.com click on this link

Cuba - Castro's fate remains in question -- Can EU Capitalize on change of power? - by Ray Sanchez

Most Cuba watchers think Castro may be setting the stage for his retirement as president of the Council of State, the island's top governing body, which he has led since its creation in the mid-1970s. Members of the National Assembly will select the council's members in March. They caution, however, that Castro has always done things on his terms. Will parliament again name Fidel Castro president of the nation's highest governing body and chief of state later this month, despite his long public absence, or will he assume more of an advisory role? Will brother Raúl be named Cuba's new president? Or will a younger generation take over? The answers lie in a process that rivals a papal selection, rife with speculation and cloaked in secrecy. When the 614-member assembly meets on Feb. 24, its main order of business will be to select members and officers of the Council of State, the island's highest governing body.Cuba watchers have identified three likely post-Castro successors: Carlos Lage, Cuba's 56-year-old vice president and a former physician; Felipe Perez Roque, the 42-year-old foreign minister; and National Assembly President Ricardo Alarcón, 70. Among the three Lage seems the person to watch because he is acceptable to multiple circles within the leadership – in the military, in the party, with the Raúlistas." Dan Erikson, an expert on Cuba at the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington. He said many of Cuba's top leaders would no doubt like to see a formal transfer of power to a younger generation, while Fidel Castro takes on a more ceremonial role. Lage is credited with engineering and implementing the limited reforms that restarted Cuba's economy after the Soviet collapse. The programs included legalizing the dollar, creating small private enterprises and agricultural cooperatives, and increasing foreign investment and tourism. Although Fidel Castro reversed many of the reforms in 2003, Lage is viewed favorably among foreign businessmen in Cuba as a pragmatist open to economic change.

Note EU-Digest: Cuban university students, in a rare public challenge to authorities, openly criticized government restrictions on access to the Internet, hotels and travel abroad. Their criticism in a video circulated this week comes as more Cubans begin to speak out about the shortcomings of Cuba's socialist system, a debate encouraged by acting President Raul Castro since taking over from his ailing brother Fidel Castro in 2006.

The EU has taken some positive and constructive steps in moving this dialog along. French Francis Wurtz, leading a delegation from the Confederal Group of the European United Left of the EU parliament, spoke out against any European Union (EU) sanction to Cuba. "We are for a constructive position and frank exchange of opinions on all issues between the 27 nations of the EU and Cuba," the legislator told the Cuban Granma newspaper.

In Cuba the European ambassador said real change in Cuba would only come when presidential power was handed over to a younger leader, such as Vice President Carlos Lage, the architect of reforms that opened up Cuba to foreign investment and tourism in the 1990s. “Raul will not move while Fidel is around. There are too many vested interests in the political bureaucracy,” he said.

In the Czech Republic the foreign minister recently pledged his country's support to Cuban dissidents, saying that the number of political prisoners in Cuba remains enormously high. Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg made the remarks after meeting in Prague with Cuban dissident Hector Palacios, who was released from Cuban prison in 2006 for health reasons and has been undergoing treatment in Spain. Schwarzenberg himself was expelled from Cuba three years ago, forced to board a plane to Paris one day before a mass dissident assembly that he had planned to attend. At the time Schwarzenber was a member of the upper chamber of Czech parliament, the Senate. Schwarzenberg said: ""I hope that in the near future, in a year or two, Cuba will become a free country with the help of the European Union". Palacios through an interpreter responded, "The Cuban opposition has strengthened ... and the regime of Fidel Castro has been weakened due to his incurable disease, which opens a huge space for changes."

Schwarzenberg has been holding talks with his Spanish counterpart as well as other foreign ministers in the EU toward making a "joint effort" to help change happen in Cuba.

It is certain that change will happen in Cuba sooner or later. The EU can play a major role in this process. It is able to be a counterforce to the radical and irresponsible conservative hard-liners outside Cuba, which seek revenge and upheaval rather than a peaceful and gradual change towards economic independence and democracy in Cuba.

Labels: , , , ,

| |

May 18, 2007 

People's Weekly World - Cuba, the European Union and Spain - by W. T. Whitney Jr.

For the complete report in the People's Weekly World click on this link

Cuba, the European Union and Spain - by W. T. Whitney Jr

As part of Washington’s decades-long project to isolate the Cuban revolution, Caleb McCarry recently undertook an eight-nation European tour. It came after a visit to Cuba in early April by Spain’s foreign minister to sign agreements with his Cuban counterpart — the first visit from a high-level European diplomat in four years. McCarry, coordinator of the Bush administration’s “Plan for Assistance to a Free Cuba,” attended a conference staged in Berlin, April 26-27, by the International Committee for Democracy in Cuba, founded in 2003 by former Czech President Václav Havel.

Present at the session were notables such as Havel and former presidents Lech Walesa of Poland and Luis Lacalle of Uruguay.

Labels: , ,

| |

Apr 29, 2007 

EUBusiness.com: Europe willing to 'support change' in Cuba

For the complete report from EUbusiness.com click on this link

Europe willing to 'support change' in Cuba

The European Union is "willing to support change" in Cuba, a Spanish newspaper quoted German Foreign Minister and current EU president Frank-Walter Steinmeier as saying on Sunday.Steinmeier told Catalan daily El Periodico the issue of future EU relations with Cuba would be raised at the next Council of the European Union meeting. Spain, which has spearheaded efforts to revive EU-Cuba relations hurt by Havana's jailing of 75 dissidents in 2003, decided to renew its ties with the island earlier this month.

Labels: ,

| |

About us

EU-Digest, a free service of Europe House, provides news highlights and links to European related news reports on economic, social and political issues. Europe House reserves the right to deny any comments or articles it finds irrelevant. The information published in EU-Digest does not necessarily reflect the viewpoint or the opinion of Europe House.

Subscribe

To subscribe enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz

Tell a friend


Eurobarometer

European Weather - Amsterdam

Click for Amsterdam, Netherlands Forecast

For information on placing your advertising link click here.

Official PayPal Seal

Search

Google


Recent posts

  • Luxist: Britain - The Queen's euro10.30 Million Be...
  • GreenBiz: Green Fuels, Cars Get Boost from Cow Pie...
  • CAHN News: Chavez Expels Israeli Ambassador Over G...
  • Hurriyet: Turks stop suspicious Iran cargo for Ve...
  • StarTribune: Israel Gaza Invasion - Backlash felt ...
  • Bloomberg.com: US Economy - Companies Cut Payrolls...
  • Xinhua: Basketball game between Turkey, Israel sus...
  • Telegraph UK: Motoring preview of 2009: 10 highlig...
  • Radio Netherlands: Netherlands' first Moroccan may...
  • Reuters: Russia supplies to south-east Europe halt...

  • Archives

    Powered by Blogger
    and Blogger Templates



    Subscribe in NewsGator Online
    Add to GoogleAdd to My AOL
    Subscribe in BloglinesSubscribe in FeedLounge
    Add EU-Digest to Newsburst from CNET News.com
    BLOGGER


    Get Firefox!