jueves, 18 de septiembre de 2008

Will Cuba get help it needs after hurricanes?

Will Cuba get help it needs after hurricanes?
By David Adams
St. Petersburg Times
Published: Tuesday, September 16, 2008 12:53 PM EDT

MIAMI — After an unprecedented double blow from powerful hurricanes
barely a week apart, Cuba is in desperate need of international help.
But where will it come from? Half the island's crops were flattened and
tens of thousands of homes destroyed, putting the total damage from
Gustav and Ike at $10 billion, according to official estimates. This
comes on top of a pre-existing housing shortage as well as recent
struggles to meet debt payments with some foreign partners.

"I'm not sure it could have been too much worse," said William Messina,
an agricultural economist at the University of Florida, an expert on
Cuban farming. While Gustav packed stronger winds, Ike's trajectory was
more destructive, raking almost the entire length of the island from
east to west.

"Two-thirds of the island received hurricane-force winds," Messina said.

The storms could not have come at a worse time for Cuban President Raul
Castro, who has made raising domestic agricultural production a national
priority to offset the impact of a global rise in food prices that has
seen Cuba's food bill jump.

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"It's a devastating blow when they can ill afford it," Messina said.

Preliminary reports from Cuban officials appear to confirm the scale of
the disaster. More than 500,000 homes were damaged - more than 10
percent of the nation's entire housing stock - with 90,000 destroyed.
Cuba's citrus crop, a major export, was virtually wiped out. Almost half
the sugar cane fields - about 700,000 acres - were flattened. Many
harvested crops, including rice and tobacco, were damaged by flooding or
roofs torn from storage facilities.

After years of steep decline, the agriculture sector had recently begun
to show signs of recovery. Production rose last year by 5.5 percent
after falling 28.7 percent over the previous three years.

"It's going to be tough sledding for the Cubans in the short term," said
Jonathan Benjamin-Alvarado, a Cuba expert at the University of Nebraska.
"It's going to significantly impact any cash reserves that Cuba has
unless they can get some disaster relief funds from the United Nations
or somewhere."

The Cuban government openly conceded Friday its currency reserves cannot
meet the devastation caused by Ike and Gustav. "It is impossible to
solve the magnitude of the catastrophe with the resources available,"
Gen. Carlos Lezcano, director of the National Institute of State
Reserves told Cuban TV.

"Never in the history of Cuba had we had a case like this one," was the
way Raul Castro summed up the disaster in a phone conversation with the
president of Namibia, quoted in official media.

In Havana food markets are already running out of warehoused supplies,
and prices have shot up.

But aid has begun to pour in from Cuba's friends, including Russia,
Venezuela and Spain. Four large IL-76 cargo planes from Russia touched
down in Havana even before Ike hit, carrying 200 tons of Russian relief
supplies, including tents, electric cables and construction material.

Russian President Dmitri Medvedev reportedly phoned Raul Castro to
promise relief aid and support for reconstruction. Venezuela sent a
delegation led by its defense minister.

Spain has also flown in 15 tons of emergency supplies, and has offered
to rebuild damaged schools on the badly hit Isle of Youth, off Cuba's
south coast.

Offers of aid have also come in from Colombia, the strongest U.S. ally
in the region, and even tiny East Timor, population 1-million, which
pledged $500,000.

The Bush administration offered Cuba $5 million in immediate relief aid,
but Cuba turned it down. Instead, Havana wants trade restrictions lifted
so it can buy American roofing and construction materials.

Cuba also wants the United States to allow it to buy from U.S. food
producers on credit. Embargo law does allow food sales, but Cuba is
required to pay cash up front.

"They say they want to buy stuff (from the U.S.), but they don't have
any money," said Jose Azel, with the Institute for Cuban and
Cuban-American Studies, a federally funded program at the University of
Miami. "Cuba simply doesn't have the resources to reconstruct. They will
try and patch up and repair, that's all."

Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.


http://www.journalinquirer.com/articles/2008/09/17/national_and_world/doc48cfe26a5fbcd348509699.txt

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