Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

blank

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


PRESS TV
Cuba and the Vatican
Wall Street Journal - Apr 17, 2008
... allowing Cubans to stay in hotels, most of which have been part of Fidel Castro's abominable "tourist apartheid"; and the signing of an international ...
Cuba Warns Foes That Recent Reforms Strengthen, Not Weaken, Socialism Washington Post
Party: No room in Cuba for 'subversion' The Associated Press
Raul Castro May Extend Cuban Travel Capabilities NBC6.net
New Albany Tribune - Caribbean Net News
all 125 news articles »
Cuba?s ?New Freedoms?
Ahora Cuba, Cuba - Apr 16, 2008
The arrival of some previously unavailable electronic items on Cuba?s store shelves, together with the new access to cell phones and tourist hotels is hot ...

CNN International
Cuba opens tourist hotels to citizens
CNN International - Mar 31, 2008
Tourist hotels in Cuba can cost anywhere from $60 to more than $200 a night -- well out of reach for most Cubans, who earn fewer than $20 a month on average ...
Cuba lifts ban that kept its citizens from staying in tourist hotels
The Canadian Press, HAVANA - Mar 31, 2008
Tourism generates more than US$2 billion annually in Cuba. Restrictions that banned all Cubans from enjoying beach resorts and luxury hotels were an ...
Cubans enjoy taste of tourist life as hotel ban ends
Reuters - Apr 7, 2008
At Varadero, the communist-run island's top resort, some Cubans checked into five-star hotels for the first time since it opened up to international tourism ...
Cuba lifts ban on locals staying in hotels
Chicago Tribune, United States - Mar 31, 2008
MIAMI - Cuba's so-called "tourism apartheid" -- which has long prohibited locals from staying at hotels -- ends midnight Monday, according to news agencies ...
Cuba lets its people stay in hotels
International Herald Tribune, France - Mar 31, 2008
Foreign hotel managers said allowing Cubans to stay at tourist hotels would help business during the slow summer season. A major public complaint that Ra?l ...
Cubans may now stay in tourist hotels - if they can afford it
Orlando Sentinel, FL - Apr 1, 2008
Now when relatives come from abroad, Cubans can stay with them in their hotels or dine with them in the dining rooms, something they were unable to do under ...
Excerpts from Press Gaggle by Tony Fratto and Dan Fisk, NSC Senior ...
Business Wire (press release), CA - 12 hours ago
We've already seen, in the case of hotels, for example, that what the regime did is end, at least on paper, the tourist apartheid that existed in Cuba, ...
Canadian snowbirds boost Cuban tourism recovery
Reuters - Apr 9, 2008
And prospects for hotels during the summer improved last week when the government of Cuba's new President Raul Castro lifted a ban on Cubans staying at ...
   
   

HAVANA — New President Raul Castro's government has lifted a ban on Cubans staying at hotels previously reserved for foreigners, ending another restriction that had been especially irksome to ordinary citizens.

"They have informed us that with a national ID card, anyone can stay here," an employee at the Ambos Mundos Hotel in Old Havana. She insisted on anonymity because she is not authorized to speak to foreign reporters, but said non-guests who are Cuban nationals will also be allowed to pay to enjoy other hotel services, including gyms.

Front desk workers and managers at the Nacional, Valencia and Santa Isabel hotels in Havana also said Ministry of Tourism officials told them Cubans can stay in hotels across the island as of midnight on Monday. Like other guests, they will be charged in convertible pesos worth 24 times the regular pesos earned by state employees.

Catering to tourists and foreign executives, many of Havana's best-known hotels charge well over $100 per night. The four-star Ambos Mundos, for example, charges $173 a night in high season — more than eight times the average monthly state salary of about $20.

Some hotels scheduled meetings with all staff members to discuss the changes, and officials said new rules will also allow Cubans to rent cars at state-run agencies for the first time.

"Access to hotels was a complaint a lot of people had, so this is positive," said Magaly, a 69-year-old Havana retiree who said she did not feel comfortable divulging her full name. "But the prices are so expensive. I can't pay for a hotel. Very few people can."

Magaly predicted a brief boom.

"Everyone will stay in hotels even if it's only for one day," she said. "But then the novelty will wear off and everything will be the same again."

On Friday, Cuba authorized its citizens to obtain mobile phones, which only foreigners and key officials in the communist government were previously allowed to have — though thousands of Cubans have already obtained phones by having foreigners sign contracts in their names.

The Interior Commerce Ministry also authorized the general sale beginning Tuesday of computers, electric bicycles, microwaves and DVD players, items which had only been sold to companies and foreigners.

"This is a dream," gasped a man named Miguel, who joined other shoppers in gawking at shiny red, blue, silver and wine-colored electric bicycles displayed in the windows of a shopping center in Havana's Vedado district.

The Chinese-made bikes, which can be plugged into wall outlets for charging, previously were prohibited for sale to Cubans because of fears of excessive use of electricity.

Miguel took out a cellular phone equipped with a camera and snapped a photo of the bikes, then added, "We have still to see at what price they sell them."

Much of the population has access to convertible pesos or other foreign currency, either through jobs in tourism or with foreign firms or cash sent by relatives living in the United States. They will suddenly have a host of new ways to spend their money.

Tourism generates more than $2 billion annually in this country, and official restrictions that banned all Cubans — even those who can afford it — from enjoying beach resorts and luxury hotels were an especially sore point for many on the island since the government began encouraging foreign tourism en masse in the early 1990s. Critics called the bans "tourism apartheid."

Even if few Cubans can take advantage of the new rule, it eliminates a glaring historical contradiction within the Cuban revolution. When rebels led by Fidel Castro took power in 1959, they joyfully overran beach resorts and hotels that had been largely limited to foreigners, declaring them open to all Cubans.

Governmental restrictions were eventually restored, however, as a way of promoting social equality within the communist system and limiting ordinary Cubans' contact with foreigners.

Since taking power from his ailing, 81-year-old brother Fidel on Feb. 24, Raul Castro, 76, has pledged to make improving Cubans' everyday life a top priority and undo "excessive restrictions" on society and the economy.

Associated Press Writer Anne-Marie Garcia contributed to this report.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Posted
E-mail | Save | Print |
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.

 

 

 

 

 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com

Search inside Iconocast for the keyword you have in mind.

Iconocast has collected more than 50,000 articles and press releases on health and science.

These are current and most up to date press releases on the subject you are searching.

We collect current health and science press releases daily from more than 5000 research and health institutes. Here is an example : The elderberry way to perfect skin

We believe if you do search inside Iconocast, you will get better results than searching the web alone.

 
 
Continue News With: News6 ; News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services.

 

Iconocast Home Page

Contact Iconocast

Iconocast Health Articles

© 2003-07. ICONOCAST is a trademark of iconocast.com.