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Updated News on the Keywords, luxury hotels + cuba + citizens , Related to the Article Below:

Cuban citizens? hotel ban lifted and other international hotel news
CatererSearch, UK - Apr 7, 2008
Cuban citizens now have the right to stay in the country?s hotels - a privilege previously afforded solely to foreigners. The move is the latest in a series ...
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Scotsman, United Kingdom - Apr 1, 2008
By Will Weissert RAUL CASTRO'S government has opened luxury hotels and resorts to all Cubans, ending a ban despised across the island as "tourist apartheid" ...

MercoPress
Raul Castro ends ?tourist apartheid? and opens hotels to Cubans
MercoPress, Uruguay - Mar 31, 2008
However the latest surprise, allowing ordinary citizens into luxury hotels and resort beaches long reserved for rich foreigners, is a particularly symbolic ...
Cubans can now stay in island?s luxury resorts
Thaindian.com, Thailand - Mar 31, 2008
Havana, March 31 (DPA) Cubans are now allowed to lodge in the communist island?s luxury hotels and resorts, the latest move in the lifting of commercial ...
Cuba lifts shopping restrictions and offers land for farming
International Herald Tribune, France - Apr 2, 2008
... luxury hotels and rent cars, doing away with restrictions that made ordinary people feel like second-class citizens. And last week, Cuba said citizens ...

The Associated Press
Castro Reforms: DVDs, Farms for Cubans
The Associated Press - Apr 1, 2008
... Cuban with enough money can stay in luxury hotels and rent cars, doing away with restrictions that made ordinary people feel like second-class citizens. ...
Fidel's successor gives Cubans the freedom to watch foreign television
Independent, UK - Apr 3, 2008
Since Monday any Cuban with enough money has been able to stay in the luxury hotels previously reserved for foreigners. "Tourism apartheid" has been a ...
Cuba ends 'tourism apartheid'
iAfrica.com, South Africa - Mar 31, 2008
Human rights critics abroad often labeled the ban on Cubans' staying in hotels a form of what they called "tourism apartheid." Cuba watchers hope the ...

AFP
Cubans allowed to check into hotels for foreigners
AFP - Mar 31, 2008
Last Friday, the government lifted a ban of the use of cellphones by the island's citizens. Mobile phones were a luxury mainly reserved for foreigners and ...
   
   

HAVANA (AP) — Raul Castro's government opened luxury hotels and resorts to all Cubans Monday, ending a ban despised across the island as "tourist apartheid" and taking another step toward the creation of a consumer economy in the socialist state.

Cuba has made a series of crowd-pleasing announcements in the past few days. Cubans with enough cash will be able to buy computers, DVD players and plasma televisions starting Tuesday, and soon they'll even be able to have their own cellphones — consumer goods only companies and foreigners were previously permitted to buy.

But the latest surprise, allowing ordinary citizens into luxury hotels and resort beaches long reserved for rich foreigners, is a particularly symbolic victory for Cuba's everyman.

"I was born here and live here. I believe, as a Cuban, I have the right to it all," Havana resident Elizabeth Quintana said. "It's good. Really good."

While there was no official word from the government, hotel employees said Ministry of Tourism officials told them that as of Monday, Cubans can stay in hotels and resorts across the island, and pay to use gyms, hair salons and other previously off-limit facilities. Cubans can even rent cars for the first time.

For now, few Cubans can afford a night at a hotel on a government salary, but that could change if Castro succeeds in increasing his citizens' spending power.

Meanwhile, the government is creating the kinds of consumer incentives any economy needs to thrive. For many years, Cubans haven't been able to buy certain electronic goods, lounge by the rooftop pool at the Hotel Capri or enjoy a drink at sunset on the grounds of the historic Hotel Nacional, no matter how much money they earned

As with other guests, the hotels will charge Cubans in convertible pesos, or CUCs, worth 24 times the regular pesos most Cubans earn. The four-star Ambos Mundos, a favorite of Ernest Hemingway in Old Havana, charges $173 a night in high season — more than eight times the average monthly state salary of about $20.

Still, at least 60% of Cubans have some access to convertible pesos and foreign currency, either through jobs in tourism or foreign firms, or cash sent by U.S. relatives. And these initiatives give them more reason to spend that cash, enabling the government to increase its reserves, said Arch Ritter, an expert on the Cuban economy at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada.

But the new government also risks increasing class tensions by suddenly making income discrepancies more evident in a society founded on the ideal of promoting social and economic equality.

Fidel Castro spent decades rallying against any reforms that could promote a new class of rich Cubans, writing as recently as July that Cuba's poor are frustrated that the island is awash in convertible pesos.

But since he succeeded his ailing brother as president in February, Raul Castro has begun to do away with what he called "excessive restrictions" on daily life.

Relaxing the hotel ban eliminates a glaring historical contradiction within the Cuban revolution. When the Castro brothers' rebels took power in 1959, they joyfully overran beach resorts and hotels that had been the playgrounds of high-rolling foreigners, declaring them open to all Cubans.

Hotel restrictions were eventually imposed after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Cuba's chief economic benefactor, to maintain equality when Cuba embraced tourism to jump-start its economy.

Hotel guards have stopped anyone who looks Cuban, limiting guests' exposure to hustlers and black-market peddlers, and police have turned away Cubans trying to enter the glittering, white-sand tourist resort of Varadero.

On Monday, tourism officials at Varadero said Cubans would now be allowed to walk the beach without restrictions, though none would divulge their names, citing government rules.

In Havana, doormen still guarded hotel entrances, and receptionists reported no immediate run on reservations in the luxurious but slightly shabby lobby of the Nacional.

Despite the restrictions, Cubans have been able to clearly see what they've been missing. The tourism industry now generates $2 billion a year, and while the U.S. travel and economic embargo limits contact with Americans, Cubans mix freely with other foreigners.

Also, unlike North Korea and other closed societies, the overwhelming majority of Cubans have family in the United States, and illegal satellite hookups beam American TV into many homes.

Now some of the gadgets they have seen on TV are finally becoming more available on the island — and not just to the elite few.

An internal memo distributed to Cuba's largest retailer and obtained by The Associated Press describes a long list of previously restricted products that go on sale nationwide Tuesday.

In one store, La Copa, where DVD players were offered for $125 and Dell desktop computers for $540, a cashier said that starting Tuesday, a sign saying "only for companies and foreigners" would be removed.

"This is a dream," gasped Miguel, who joined other shoppers gawking at the shiny red, blue, silver and wine-colored electric bicycles suddenly on display at a shopping center in the upscale Vedado neighborhood. The Chinese-made bikes are charged through a power cord and had been prohibited for general sale because the government feared excessive use of electricity.

Cuba analysts say it's hard to predict where this is going in the long term.

"They're trickling out policy moves one by one, and there's no road map," said Phil Peters of the Lexington Institute, a pro-democracy think tank based outside Washington.

"I would doubt if Raul has a complete model in mind, Chinese, Vietnamese, whatever," added Ritter, the Canadian economist. "I think he's going with things that work in the short run. And where it's going, I don't think he could even say or would want to say."

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.
The interior of Havana's historic Hotel Nacional, which is among the luxury lodgings  and luxuries overall  on the tropical island that Cuban citizens will now be able to enjoy.
The interior of Havana's historic Hotel Nacional, which is among the luxury lodgings — and luxuries overall — on the tropical island that Cuban citizens will now be able to enjoy.

 

 

 

 

 
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