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Culture > Cuba > Free expression...
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Free expression must go with better communications, says Re****ters

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 6, 2008 at 02:18 PM

31 March 2008

Free expression must go with better communications, says Re****ters 
Without Borders as blogs prove hard to access

Re****ters Without Borders today expressed concern that Cuban Internet 
users are struggling to get access to blogs on the desdecuba.com 
platform that hosts, among others, one of the most popular in the 
country, Generación Y, a blog run by Yoani Sánchez.

The platform (www.desdecuba.com) has been inaccessible from public 
connection points in cybercafés and hotels since 2O March. The few 
private connections, used for professional reasons or in secret, take at 
least 20 minutes to download the home page. Editing and moderating posts 
has become impossible.

"It is hard to believe that after ten days desdecuba.com is simply 
having technical problems, even if there is a real problem getting an 
Internet connection from Cuba. This situation is in contradiction to 
recent steps taken by the authorities to ease access for Cubans to 
communications, especially the Internet," the worldwide press freedom 
organisation said.

"Since you cannot have one without the other, the promise of greater 
openness given by Raúl Castro must include greater freedom of
expression."

Desdecuba.com hosts an online review, Consenso, and six blogs, including 
Generación Y (http://www.desdecuba.com/generaciony),
created in April 
2007 by Yoani Sánchez and regularly visited by large numbers of Cubans. 
More than one million Internet users visited the young blogger's page in 
February 2008.

Elsewhere, there have been difficulties accessing 
http://www.cu.clasificados.com
and http://www.revolico.net,
both posting 
small advertisements. The public company ETECSA, Cuba's sole access 
provider, has not provided any explanation.

The problems getting access to website pages comes at the end of a month 
marked by several announced decisions to ease private acquisition of 
some consumer goods. And on 28 March the government said it was allowing 
Cubans to buy mobile phones and that the entire population would have 
access to a mobile phone service. Three days earlier, it legalised the 
sale of computers, televisions and tape-recorders and authorised the 
im****t of DVDs. Moreover, from today, Cubans are allowed to go into 
hotels, which were previously reserved for foreigners, allowing them 
access to the international Internet network.

These steps are part of a policy of greater economic openness promoted 
by Raúl Castro, who officially took over as head of state from his 
brother, Fidel, on 24 February this year, after 20 months of interim 
power. He promised Cubans that he would put an end to "excessive bans 
and regulations".

The Internet in Cuba is highly controlled. There is a "national" network 
which gives users an email address and allows them to send emails abroad 
but not to surf the net. The "international" network, which costs three 
times as much, gives access to foreign news websites like the BBC, Le 
Monde, and Nuevo Herald (Miami-based Spanish-language daily). But if you 
type in "google.fr", for example, you are redirected to the pages of the 
official Cuban newspaper Granma or the news agency Prensa Latina. Cuba 
figures on Re****ters Without Borders' list of "Internet Enemies" , which 
was released on 12 March 2008.

http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=26396
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Free expression must go with better communications, says Reporte
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-06 14:18:33 

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