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Another ban lifted: Cubans can now stay in tourist hotels, rent cars

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 31, 2008 at 02:32 PM

Another ban lifted: Cubans can now stay in tourist hotels, rent cars
Ray Sanchez | Direct from Havana
7:18 AM EDT, March 31, 2008
Havana, Cuba

In a small but symbolically im****tant move, Raul Castro's government 
early Monday quietly lifted its controversial ban keeping Cubans from 
staying at tourist hotels.

"We've had no Cuban guests so far but the hotel is overbooked right 
now," said Sandra, a young woman working the front desk at the Hotel 
Nacional shortly after midnight. She said a tourism ministry official 
informed hotel management of the change late Sunday.

The decision was the latest in a spate of modest moves that indicate 
that Castro, 76, is setting out to reshape daily life on the communist 
island. Workers at all-night rental car offices in the capital said the 
ban on Cubans renting autos also ended at midnight.

Granma, the Community Party daily newspaper, made no mention of the 
change on its website early Monday, but several hotel and rental-car 
employees said they were informed of the move late Sunday.

Since officially succeeding his ailing brother Fidel on Feb. 24, the 
younger Castro has legalized products and services that Cubans had been 
forced to acquire on the black market. Besides lifting restrictions on 
cell phone owner****p last week, Castro also ended a ban on the purchase 
of certain consumer electronics such as computers and DVD players.

The changes may be setting the stage for a revaluation of the Cuban peso 
and possible elimination of the dual-currency system that has 
impoverished millions of Cubans. State salaries are paid in the nearly 
worthless peso, while many products and services are purchased in 
convertible pesos. Twenty-four Cuban pesos equal one convertible peso, 
known as a CUC.

Those who live solely on government salaries, which average about $20 a 
month, struggle to survive, even with free health care and education and 
subsidized rations of food.

At the Nacional, for instance, a double room was priced at $184 a night, 
a single room $130 per night. A suite was $232.

"I'm very happy," said Sandra, of the policy change. She asked her last 
name not be used because she was unauthorized to speak with the media. 
"We're all very happy at the hotel. I stayed here before the 
restrictions went into place in the early 1990s. We're celebrating."

At the Tryp Peninsula in the Varadero beach resort early Monday, a front 
desk employee named Alina, who also asked her name because she was not 
authorized to speak with the media, confirmed the change but said she 
didn't expect many Cuban guests. A double room cost $351 a night, a 
single $221.

"I hope this helps tourism," she said. "We don't know if many Cubans 
will stay here... The hotel is a little pricey for me. This is a new 
five-star, all-inclusive hotel but there are cheaper hotels in Cuba."

At the Mercure Coralia Cuatro Palmas hotel in Varadero, a worker , who 
declined to give his name for fear of reprisal, welcomed the change. 
"Cubans should have the same rights as everyone else," he said.

more in /news/local/cuba

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-0331havanadaly,0,585457.column
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Another ban lifted: Cubans can now stay in tourist hotels, rent
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-03-31 14:32:52 

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