From the CBC:
“How Canadian tourism sustains
Cuba's army and one-party state”
(Felix Blanco, who grew up around
the tourist city of Varadero, Cuba, attends a protest in Montreal on July 24,
2021.)
Standing on a street corner in
Montreal, Reinaldo Rodriguez has a message for Canadians. "Canadian
tourists are feeding the Cuban regime," he told CBC News. Rodriguez was
part of a wave of protests that have swept Canada's 30,000-strong Cuban
community since unrest spread across the island on July 11. "The people
don't see (the money)," he said. "The same as happens with the money
the government makes from its doctors who work overseas. The Cuban hospitals
are unsanitary, people don't have medicines." Fellow protester Felix
Blanco carried a sign that read, "All-included resort in Cuba: 51 per cent
dictatorship, 49 per cent foreign company, 0 per cent Cuban people." Blanco
grew up in Varadero, the heart of the country's sun-and-sand industry. "The
regime uses that money for repression," he told CBC News. "We can see
how many police cars they have, how well prepared they are to repress. But we
don't have ambulances." (Cuban authorities have said they lack gasoline
for ambulances.)
Cuban-Canadian activists say many
Canadians are not aware of the extent to which the survival of Cuba's one-party
regime depends upon the foreign currency tourists bring into the country, or
the lengths the Cuban government will go to keep Canadians coming. And an even
smaller number realize just how many of their dollars are going not to Cuba's
undemocratic government, but directly to a group of companies controlled by a
small group of well-connected generals in Cuba's Revolutionary Armed Forces.
COVID crushes tourism While
foreign arrivals in Cuba have crashed this year, no other nationality has
stayed away as much as Canadians, according to Cuban government statistics. Overall
visits are down about 95 per cent compared to 2019, but Canadian visits have
plunged by 99.5 per cent. (Russia, by contrast, actually sent more visitors in
2021.) That is hugely damaging to Cuba's economy, because (in normal
years) far more Canadians enter and leave Cuba than citizens of any other
country — including Cuba itself. On January 1 this year, Cuba — like
many countries — introduced new rules requiring all visitors to produce a
negative PCR test for COVID-19 before travel. Cuba is an island and few of its
impoverished citizens can afford to leave it. Foreign visitors are its main
source of vulnerability when it comes to COVID.
'Our families are starving,' say
Cuban Londoners watching unrest back home But just a few days later, Cuba
removed the testing requirement exclusively for Canadian visitors. It wasn't
because Canada's COVID risk was lower. In fact, the rules were relaxed just as
Canada was approaching peak caseload for the entire pandemic up to that point —
about 8,000 new cases a day. (It's just a few hundred per day now.) Cuba
avoided the worst of the pandemic through 2020. That changed in 2021; Cuba
reported just 169 new cases on January 1, 2021, but was recording over 1,000
new daily cases by February 1. The Cuban
government also offered PCR tests to Canadians returning home at about
one-tenth of the price one would expect to pay in Canada, the U.S. or Mexico. Some
Canadians remained so eager to visit Cuba they sought to extend the Atlantic
bubble to include the Caribbean island — by travelling from Halifax to Cayo
Coco to stay in a Canadians-only hotel at a time when Nova Scotia was requiring
most Canadians looking to visit the province to apply for government
permission.
The army and the resorts In
December 2019, just before COVID hit, Cuban President Raul Castro named Manuel
Marrero Cruz as Cuba's first prime minister in over 30 years. The last
person to hold the post had been Fidel Castro himself, who left it to become
president. The appointment of the long-serving minister of tourism demonstrated
the vital importance of hotels and resorts to Cuba's economy. Other than
tourism, there is little Cuba has to offer world markets in comparison to its
needs. For every dollar it gains through exports, it spends five on imports. It
looks to tourists to make up that yawning gap year after year. Raul
Castro, more than anyone else, is responsible for Cuba's modern resort
industry. Seen by many Cubans as more pragmatic than his brother Fidel, Raul
was in charge of the Revolutionary Armed Forces when Soviet aid to Cuba dried
up. He used the country's defence
budget to branch out into tourism and other businesses, creating the nucleus of
a business empire that today is the biggest player in the Cuban economy. Hotels
went up around Cuba's western coast, although Cuba's own people were forbidden
to visit them until 2008 (the same year the Cuban government dropped its ban on
cellphones, computers and DVD players.)
A hotel empire led by a
general
(Cuban General Luis Alberto
Rodriguez Lopez-Calleja was married to the daughter of Raul Castro and heads
GAESA, the holding company of the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces.)
At the top of the military's
hotel empire sits General Luis Alberto Rodriguez Lopez-Calleja, father of two
of Raul Castro's grandchildren and a member of Cuba's Politburo — a man some
Cubans believe is the one really running the country alongside his
father-in-law, using President Miguel Diaz-Canel as a replaceable public face. Rodriguez
Lopez-Calleja heads the armed forces' holding company GAESA, which runs a range
of tourism, construction, banking, air and ground transport and retail
businesses across the country, including the hotel chain Gaviota, which owns
most of the four- and five-star hotel rooms in the country. The Cuban state
also owns Cuba's two other big chains, the Gran Caribe Hotel Group and
Cubanacan, although both chains recently have been losing ground to the
military's holding company. The accounts of the chains, like those of all state
enterprises in Cuba, are closed. But the Cuban government has been very public
about its intentions to build its economic future on tourism. Cuba's current development plan foresees the
construction of over 100,000 new hotel rooms by 2030, along with 24 new golf
courses. At the heart of the growth plan are GAESA and other companies owned by
the armed forces. GAESA will spend over $15 billion on 121 hotel projects,
twice as much as is expected to come from foreign investors and Cuba's civilian
government combined.
The Cuban military is on track to
own over 90,000 hotel rooms by 2030 — more rooms than currently exist in the
entire Dominican Republic, the most hotel-rich country in the Caribbean. And
spending on new hotel and real estate ventures now far outstrips Cuba's
shrinking budgets for health, education, agriculture and science combined. Even
as the pandemic gripped Cuba and tourism plunged, Cuba's Communist government
was able to find Canadian partners. Blue Diamond Resorts, a company that
already manages about 20 state-owned hotels in Cuba, went into business with
the Cuban state again in August 2020 to open boutique hotel Mystique Casa Perla
in Varadero. Neither Blue Diamond nor its parent company Sunwing responded to
CBC News inquiries for this article. Neither did the Cuba Tourist Board of
Canada.
Richard Feinberg of the
University of California San Diego co-wrote a paper on Cuba's tourist industry
for the Brookings Institution. He said foreign hotel chains typically have one
of two types of arrangements with the Cuban state or military. Hotels owned by
the Ministry of Tourism, he said, often have foreign companies as junior
partners (typically with a 49 per cent stake in the property, with Cuba holding
the controlling share). Military-owned hotels, he said, more often belong
entirely to the military's real estate company Almest S.A., and foreign
partners merely have management contracts.
Low wages, 'captive' workforce
Workers are provided through an employment agency also controlled by
GAESA/Gaviota. While a foreign company pays Gaviota an estimated $750 a month
for the average base-salary worker, the worker would typically receive less
than 10 per cent of that amount in salary. The rest goes to the Cuban military.
Cuban hotel workers take home only a tiny fraction of what their
counterparts in Cancun or the Dominican Republic earn for similar work. Guest
workers from India working on one hotel were paid ten times more than their
Cuban peers. Communist Party organs defended the pay difference by
claiming that the productivity of Indian workers was "three or four times
better" than the average Cuban's. In addition, GAESA's construction
projects benefit from the forced labour of military conscripts, such as those
who dug the foundation beneath the new Hotel Prado y Malecon in Havana. Felix
Blanco points to another difference between Cuba's tourist industry and other
Caribbean destinations: a captive workforce. While Mexican workers unsatisfied
with their wages can leave and set up on their own, "my family in Cuba are
not allowed to have their own business." A Cuban who leaves a $40/month
job in the tourist sector will be lucky to earn $30/month in other sectors of
the economy. Tourism jobs are highly sought after, said Feinberg. "Cubans
leave their jobs as engineers, as medical professionals, as teachers, to work
in those hotels," he told CBC News, "because that's where the
salaries are better, the working conditions are better, and you have access to
tips from international tourists."
No way around the military Some
tourists choose to avoid big hotels and resorts in Cuba, preferring private
homes and B&Bs. Even then, it's hard for them to avoid enriching Cuba's
military. It operates the banks through which tourists make credit card
payments to individuals. It operates the stores that sell imported food and
goods. The Cuban military dominates hotel building in Havana and five
years ago took over control of Habaguanex, the consortium that operates Old
Havana's stores and restaurants, previously run by the city's official
historian Eusebio Leal. As U.S. hotel company Marriott discovered last
year, it is virtually impossible to operate on the island today without
enriching what is already the country's richest institution: the Revolutionary
Armed Forces. Opinions are divided on whether Canadian
tourists might, by staying away, hasten the fall of Cuba's one-party state.
Cuban-Canadians like Felix Blanco say they believe it would help. Feinberg,
meanwhile, said he's skeptical of "the idea that if we could only reduce
the number of stays at these hotels we could somehow starve out and shrink the
Cuban security apparatus." The Cuban government would ensure that
resources flow to that apparatus one way or another, he said. What's not clear is where they would flow
from. Cuba's increasing dependence on tourism has been acknowledged by
President Miguel Diaz-Canel himself, who has called it "the locomotive of
the Cuban economy" and once told national deputies that "what we have
on a weekly basis to pay credits, to buy raw materials and to invest, comes
from tourism." "Cuba is a place that a lot of Canadians have
affection for," said Karen Dubinsky of Queens University, who has written
about the lives of ordinary Cubans. "Canadians aren't stupid. They
know that to be on vacation in a resort hotel is not the same as living life,
certainly not the same as how Cubans live life. And maybe Canadians could dig a
little deeper," she told CBC News. "If Canadians become more
sympathetic and educated tourists as a result of this, that's a good place to
start."
^ Canadians need to start realizing
that by going to Cuba they are only helping the Communist Party (with its Human
Rights Abuses and other Dictatorial abuses.) ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/cuba-canada-tourism-1.6124982
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