- EFE: A Repsol executive expects drilling in Cuba’s Gulf waters to begin in November and has received “neither calls nor messages” from the U.S. government.
- Reuters: Dutch bank ING says it is under a Treasury Department Cuba sanctions investigation; the alleged offenses are unspecified.
- Herald: With Cuban landing rights granted, weekly Tampa-Havana flights are now set to begin.
- How one day’s Granma provides a window on the United States: a story about a North Carolina man who robbed a bank (of one dollar) to get into prison for medical care, and a story about Latinos in the U.S. armed forces.
- New York Times: In a new book, a photographer documents Havana’s “privileged creative class.”
- El Nuevo Herald: The debate over the “People’s Path” document continues (see here and here), with Armando Valladares supporting Biscet and Elizardo Sanchez and Oswaldo Paya rebutting him.
Nice article on the creative privileged class. There are still a few defenders of the revolution who continue to deny that such a class exists. They claim that any person in Cuba with a lot of money must have relatives in Miami. I wonder what they will have to say about this book.
ReplyDeleteI believe these are the people who were referred to as the "Nomenklatura" in the former Soviet Bloc. I wonder if there is a Cuban term for this class.