Showing posts with label Cuba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cuba. Show all posts

Friday, April 13, 2012

Calderon Says Cuba, Mexico Friends Again


By Jeff Franks

HAVANA | Thu Apr 12, 2012 2:56pm EDT

(Reuters) - Mexican President Felipe Calderon declared Mexico and Cuba friends again on Thursday at the end of a visit that included talks with Cuban leader Raul Castro to patch up strained relations between the two countries.

Calderon, speaking to reporters as he prepared to leave Havana for Haiti, said the problems of the past had been replaced by a new cordiality, affirmed by the signing of accords to increase cooperation in areas such as oil and healthcare.

He also condemned the 50-year-long U.S. trade embargo against Cuba.

"Through this official visit, Cuba and Mexico have begun a renewed stage of our relationship," Calderon said at the Havana airport.

"They have been two extraordinary days for Cuba and for Mexico in that their mutual affection has been found again."

Calderon met with President Raul Castro on Wednesday and had what he described as "a frank, open dialogue befitting the leaders of two sister countries."

Both agreed it was time to restore their long friendship even if, as Calderon said on Wednesday, they did not agree on all matters.

"The friendship of Mexicans and Cubans is something that will last forever, beyond any situation," Calderon said. It was not known if he met with former Cuban leader Fidel Castro, who is Raul Castro's older brother and was succeeded by him in 2008.

Mexico once prided itself on having warm relations with Cuba despite the hostility of the United States, its superpower neighbor, toward the island's communist government.

But when conservative Vicente Fox was elected Mexico's president in 2000, he took a less sympathetic line toward Cuba which led to a series of spats with Fidel Castro.

They clashed over human rights, and in 2002 Fox told the revolutionary leader that he could attend a Mexican-hosted diplomatic summit, but had to leave before then-U.S. President George W. Bush arrived.

'VILE TRAITOR'

Fidel Castro recorded the conversation, then made it public in an embarrassing episode for Fox.

Fidel Castro, who is 85 but has a long memory, called Fox a "vile traitor" for the incident in a 2009 column published in Cuba's state-run media.

That same year, Calderon, who succeeded Fox in 2006, angrily cancel led an official visit to Cuba after the island government suspended flights between the two countries at the height of a health scare over swine flu.

Now, said Calderon, both he and Raul Castro had "agreed to increase trade and investment," as well cooperation in health, education, culture and sports.

Trade between the two countries total led $373 million in 2011, the Mexican government said.

Among the accords signed was a non-binding letter of intent for state oil company Pemex to look into "the possibility of participating and investing in the exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbons" in Cuba's part of the Gulf of Mexico contiguous to Mexican waters, Calderon said.

The non-binding nature of the letter of intent means there is no guarantee Pemex will proceed with the evaluation.

"Pemex does not have the capital and/or technology for their own development so I do not see how they would do it in Cuba," said Cuba oil expert Jorge Pinon at the University of Texas.

"If they do it, it would be totally political."

A consortium led by Spanish oil company Repsol YPF is drilling the first of what could be a series of wells in Cuba's part of the Gulf of Mexico, where Cuba says it may have 20 billion barrels of oil.

The U.S. Geological Survey has estimated a more modest 5 billion barrels.

According to Mexican press reports, the two governments were to discuss Cuba's debt of more than $400 million to Mexico, but Calderon did not mention it.

He condemned the U.S. trade embargo and praised Cuba for its role in forming CELAC, the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, a hemispheric organization created in 2010 that Cuba and its socialist ally Venezuela have promoted as an alternative to the U.S.-dominated Organization of American States.

Calderon flew to Haiti from Havana and was to go to Cartagena, Colombia, for the Summit of the Americas, which the OAS has helped organize.

Cuba, which is a former member of the OAS, was not invited to the hemispheric summit despite a strong push by several left-leaning Latin American countries, led by Ecuador, to have it invited. The United States, which will be represented by President Barack Obama at the event, strongly opposed inviting Cuba.

(Additional reporting by Rosa Tania Valdes and Nelson Acosta; editing by David Adams and Mohammad Zargham)

Lets Sing a Song for the Honor and Glory of Cuba

Troubadours sing to and for Cuba in Santiago

Ozzie Guillen Is a Man of Unquestionable Courage


To live in the most fascist city, and cesspool of the United States, and to say "I love Fidel Castro," adding "You know why? A lot of people have wanted to kill Fidel Castro for the last 60 years, but that motherfucker is still there." you have to have big cojones.

Many non-Cuban Latinos share Guillen's positive view of Castro

Thursday, April 12, 2012

A Photo that Barack Obama and his Miami Fascists @ Babalu Blog Don't Want You to See

Batista's soldiers executing a rebel by firing squad in 1956.

Source: Wikepedia

It has been reported on the Internet, that General Fulgencio Batista, was admitted as an honorary and secret member of the Democratic Party of the United States.

Where did Barack Obama learn to do extra-judicial executions? From the General!

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Ozzie Guillen is Very Lucky that The Miami Terrorists Did Not Put a Bomb in His Car

Salon.com

Guillen’s pro-Castro candor

The Miami Marlins' manager is lucky to get a suspension. Not so long ago, he might have received a car bomb.

Tuesday, Apr 10, 2012 6:30 PM EDT

By Jefferson Morley


There’s not much reason to doubt that baseball manager Ozzie Guillen admires Fidel Castro. He said so five years ago in an interview with Men’s Journal. When asked to name the toughest man he knew, Guillen replied, “Fidel Castro. He’s a bull—- dictator and everybody’s against him, and he still survives, has power. Still has a country behind him. Everywhere he goes, they roll out the red carpet. I don’t admire his philosophy; I admire him.’’

No one cared about that macho thought because Guillen was skipper of the Chicago White Sox at the time. As the newly hired manager of the Miami Marlins, Guillen repeated the notion to Time last week–”I respect Fidel Castro,” he said. “You know why? A lot of people have wanted to kill Fidel Castro for the last 60 years, but that [expletive] is still there”–and he found himself on the brink of unemployment.

As Miami’s Cuban-American talk radio hosts whipped up a storm of protest, the Marlins denounced Guillen and suspended him for five games. On Tuesday the chastened manager repudiated his statements, said Castro was a bad man, and apologized “on my knees.” With Guillen’s job hanging in the balance, most sportswriters attributed the controversy to his big mouth: He is known for insulting gays and admitting he likes to get drunk often.

But Guillen’s real problem is Cuban Miami, where enforcing the anti-Castro party line is a more popular pastime than baseball, not the least because the Marlins owners arranged to stick the city’s taxpayers with the bill for their new $640 million ballpark in Little Havana while depriving local residents of legal parking spaces. The combination of Guillen’s candor, Miami politics, and the Marlins’ arrogance is what has brought the Cooperstown-bound skipper to the brink of being fired.

The city has never shown much tolerance for people who say nice things about Castro. In 2000, Jim Mullin, editor of the city’s alternative weekly New Times, compiled a chronology of violent intolerance that has few parallels in modern America. In 1975 a Cuban American man was murdered after advocating closer relations with Castro’s Cuba. In 1978, an anti-Castro talk radio host had his legs blown off by a car bomb because he dared criticize his fellow exiles for resorting to violence. In 1983, the Little Havana branch of a Miami bank was bombed because one of its executives had negotiated with the Castro government for the release of 3,600 political prisoners. In 1998, a bomb threat emptied a concert hall during a performance by Compay Segundo, a 91-year-old musician made famous by the movie “The Buena Vista Social Club.” All told, Mullin found more than 40 instances of bomb threats and explosions directed at people who had somehow offended the anti-Castro orthodoxy.

A 1994 Human Rights Watch report on the sorry state of free speech in Miami concluded, the city is “dominated by fiercely anti-Communist forces who are strongly opposed to contrary viewpoints.” The HRW reports linked these forces to “acts of repression ranging from shunning to violence.” The reports found “significant responsibility” by the government at all levels, including “direct harassment by the government and government support of groups linked to anti-free speech behavior.”

That tradition continued this week when two local politicians injected themselves into the controversy by calling for Guillen’s firing. The call was echoed by a vigilante group known as Vigilia Mambisa, which describes itself as “a hard-line, right wing, Anti-Castro, Anti-Communist group of dedicated Cuban-American demonstrators … known for their rapid response to calls for protest aired on Miami Spanish-language stations.” The group is calling for a boycott of the Marlins until Guillen is fired.

The problem is Miamians are already boycotting the Marlins. The team ranked 28th out of 30 major league teams in attendance last year. Dario Moreno, a professor of political science at Florida International University, said, “I don’t think this is a free speech issue. There’s a lot more tolerance than there was 30 years ago.” Moreno noted that south Florida’s three Cuban-American congressional representatives and the state’s Cuban-American senator have not called for Guillen to be fired.

“This has more to do with the Marlins and a community that invested large sums of money in their stadium over the objections of lots of people,” Moreno said. “The promise was that they would bring the community together and give us something to be proud of. It’s not working out very well.”

Moreno says he thinks Guillen may be able to keep his job if the Marlins muzzle Guillen (good luck with that) and reach out to the community. “The baseball fans are willing to let this one go by if he just promises to not talk politics,” Moreno said.

“As a Christian, I accept his apology,” said Alberto Muller, a former newspaper columnist who spent 15 years in a Cuban prison. “But in Miami, not everybody is a Christian.” Muller thinks Guillen will be fired.

A Miami Herald online reader survey found 57 percent of 2,500-plus respondents saying Guillen’s five-game suspension was sufficient punishment. If Guillen only loses his job for expressing admiration for Fidel’s toughness, it will be a sign of civic progress. Not long ago, he might have lost his legs or his life.

Abril 11, 1895: José Martí y Máximo Gómez Desembarcan por La Playita de Cajobabo

Dicha grande

Recuerdan desembarco de José Martí y Máximo Gómez por La Playita de Cajobabo, el 11 de abril de 1895

Armando Hart Dávalos
digital@juventudrebelde.cu
10 de Abril del 2012 22:12:41 CDT


En la noche del 11 de abril de 1895, envueltos en la oscuridad, con el mar tormentoso y bajo lluvia gruesa, en un bote con el timón perdido se aproximan a la tierra cubana José Martí y Máximo Gómez, junto a otros cuatro patriotas. Como un alivio, en medio de tanta adversidad, una luna roja ilumina el momento del desembarco en una pequeña playa pedregosa en la costa sudoriental, que Martí nombra en su diario como La Playita, al pie de Cajobabo. En ese mismo diario define emocionado ese primer contacto con la tierra cubana con la frase «Dicha grande».

Se inicia un recorrido por el territorio de su amada Cuba que duraría 38 días hasta su caída en combate en Dos Ríos y que hoy recordamos, en el aniversario 117 de aquel desembarco, con respeto y admiración, como parte de la memoria sagrada de la patria.

Al desembarcar en Cuba, Martí estaba consciente que debía enseñar con el ejemplo y sin ser un guerrero asumió el reto de venir a encabezar, junto con Gómez y Maceo, la guerra de independencia que había organizado y convocado. Ese sentido ético es la razón más profunda para venir a Cuba y poner su propia vida en la balanza del peligro: «El hombre de actos —había dicho él— solo respeta al hombre de actos (…) ¡La razón, si quiere guiar, tiene que entrar en la caballería! y morir, para que la respeten los que saben morir».1 Estaba consciente de que ese era el único modo de ejercer con sus ideas una influencia mayor para el presente y futuro.

Como he señalado antes, el valor de su decisión heroica está en que ella constituía una exigencia de la tarea política y revolucionaria que se había planteado. Guiado siempre por principios éticos, sabía que era necesario predicar con el ejemplo incluso a riesgo de su propia vida.

Se ha convertido en una necesidad para la cabal comprensión de los procesos en marcha hoy en Estados Unidos profundizar en el pensamiento martiano, que nos ofrece una visión precisa de la época que le tocó vivir y de la historia de aquel país a fines del siglo XIX, sus costumbres, su acelerado desarrollo económico, los procesos electorales inescrupulosos y corruptos, las carencias en su vida espiritual junto a la más nítida y fascinante descripción de las ideas que se gestaban en esa nación en la antesala de su estreno como potencia imperialista, precisamente con su irrupción en la guerra que libraban los cubanos contra España para despojar a esta de los restos de lo que fuera su imperio colonial en América y en Asia.

Impresiona comprobar lo acertado de sus previsiones, veedor profundo, de una intuición y capacidad de análisis y de proyección de futuro realmente sorprendentes.

Hoy es más necesario que nunca antes promover los valores humanistas presentes en el pensamiento de nuestro Héroe Nacional y en la cultura cubana como escudo eficaz para defender nuestra unidad y nuestras conquistas y rechazar las campañas injerencistas y distorsionadoras de nuestra realidad, que en Europa y Estados Unidos se fraguan para aislar y destruir la Revolución.

Estamos conscientes de la importancia decisiva de esta batalla que libramos no solo por Cuba y su pueblo bloqueado y agredido, sino también por todos los que aspiran a un mundo de paz, igualdad y justicia con alcance verdaderamente universal.

Han transcurrido 117 años de aquel acontecimiento y hoy el legado ético, político y filosófico de José Martí se ha convertido en un referente indispensable para encontrar los caminos prácticos que nos permitan salvar a la humanidad y a la naturaleza de una debacle de proporciones incalculables.

Por eso, podemos afirmar que Martí sigue vivo y actuante entre nosotros y que, al igual que la Generación del Centenario ayer, que no lo dejó morir a los cien años de su natalicio, cuando Fidel Castro lo proclamó como el autor intelectual de la Revolución Cubana, estamos llamados a preservar su rico legado para las generaciones presentes y venideras y a promover desde la familia, la escuela, y los medios de comunicación masiva, sus ideas patrióticas y antiimperialistas y a darles continuidad a sus enseñanzas éticas y políticas en el relevo más joven.

1 José Martí: “Discurso en conmemoración del 10 de Octubre de 1868”, Nueva York, 10 de octubre de 1890, en Obras completas, t.4, Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, La Habana, 1991, p. 252.

@ Players of El Beisbol Cubano II: Peter Bjarkman's Compilation of Alfredo Depaigne's Home Runs in Cuba's 51st National Baseball Series

Click here to go to
Players of El Beisbol Cubano II

Giant Billboard for the Cuban Five Is Raised in the Heart of Miami


10 Abril 2012

La semana pasada dijimos que estábamos trabajando en un plan secreto que sería una sorpresa para todos. Pues ya la sorpresa es noticia. Se trata de una valla anunciadora de Radio-Miami y la Alianza Martiana, en la que se reclama la libertad de los Cinco cubanos anti-terroristas injustamente presos en cárceles norteamericanas.

La valla está situada en la primera calle del South West de Miami y la 17 avenida, en el mismo corazón de la Pequeña Habana. El texto es en inglés e invita al pueblo miamense a conectarse con la dirección electrónica radio-miami.org a ver el video Freedom, donde el Presidente del Parlamento Cubano Ricardo Alarcón expone en idioma inglés el caso de los Cinco.

Hasta ahora, sin novedad en el frente. Veremos que pasa mañana con los Iracundos de Miami y la libertad de expresión.

Cubadebate

Monday, April 9, 2012

Yoenis Cespedes - 2009 World Baseball Classic

This baseball card is currently selling at eBay for
$42.99 US Dollars.

Jose Dariel Abreu Is Chasing the Record of Alfredo Despaigne

Photo is courtesy of BaseballdeCuba.com

Despaigne has 35 home-runs, Abreu has 32.


Could Abreu win the Triple Crown? He is leading Despaigne in Average (.386 vs .340). But he is behind in RBI's. He has only 92.

Despaigne is leading in Home Runs (35) and RBI's (100). Alfredo is Cuba's new 100/30 Club member.

They are Cuba's best two baseball players right now, so anything can happen. It is going to be fun watching them compete in April.

Los Cocodrilos de Matanzas are the first Cuban Baseball team to qualify this year for the 51st National Series Playoffs


Los Cocodrilos de Matanzas se convirtieron en el primer equipo que consigue su pase a las rondas finales de la 51 Serie Nacional y, al mismo tiempo, implantaron un récord de victorias para un conjunto con ese nombre, al conseguir ayer su éxito número 50 a costa de los Sabuesos de Holguín.

Los yumurinos, con el mejor average de la justa, 595, ya resultan inalcanzables para el ocupante del quinto lugar de la zona occidental, Pinar del Río, al cual solo le restan por efectuar ocho desafíos. En el supuesto caso de un empate, matanceros y vueltabajeros igualaron a tres triunfos en su serie particular, pero los primeros tienen seis carreras de ventaja. En la pasada Serie, Matanzas finalizó con balance de 34 triunfos y 55 fracasos, en el puesto número 14.


Source: Granma

Estadio Latinoamericano en La Habana

Photo: CocoBeisbol

Fidel Castro: Canadians were always respectful of our country

JG: The same can not be said of the Yankee imperialists. Starting with Dwight D. Eisenhower and ending with Barack H. Obama, they all thought that they owned Cuba.

IN YOUR DREAMS! YOU FOOLS!


Reflexiones de Fidel @ CubaDebate

Las ilusiones de Stephen Harper

8 Abril 2012 20


Creo, sin ánimo de ofender a nadie, que así se llama el Primer Ministro de Canadá. Lo deduzco de una declaración publicada el “Miércoles Santo” por un vocero del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores de ese país. Son casi 200 los Estados, supuestamente independientes, que integran la Organización de Naciones Unidas. Constantemente cambian o los cambian. Muchos son personas honorables y amigos de Cuba, pero no es posible recordar los detalles de cada uno de ellos.

En la segunda mitad del siglo XX tuve el privilegio de vivir años de intenso aprendizaje, y apreciar que los canadienses, ubicados en el extremo norte de este hemisferio, fueron siempre respetuosos de nuestro país. Invertían en esferas de su interés y comerciaban con Cuba, pero no intervenían en los asuntos internos de nuestro Estado.

El proceso revolucionario iniciado el 1º de Enero de 1959 no implicó medidas que afectaran sus intereses, los cuales fueron tomados en cuenta por la Revolución en el mantenimiento de relaciones normales y constructivas con las autoridades de aquel país donde se llevaba a cabo un intenso esfuerzo por su propio desarrollo. No fueron, por tanto, cómplices del bloqueo económico, la guerra, y la invasión mercenaria que Estados Unidos aplicó contra Cuba.

En mayo de 1948, año en que se creó la OEA, institución de bochornosa historia que dio al traste con lo poco que ya quedaba del sueño de los libertadores de América, Canadá estaba lejos de pertenecer a la misma. Ese status se mantuvo durante más de 40 años, hasta 1990. Algunos de sus líderes nos visitaron. Uno de ellos fue Pierre Elliott Trudeau, brillante y valiente político, muerto prematuramente, a cuyo sepelio asistimos en nombre de Cuba.

Se supone que la OEA sea una organización regional integrada por los Estados soberanos de este hemisferio. Tal afirmación, como otras muchas de consumo diario, encierra un gran número de mentiras. Lo menos que podemos hacer es estar conscientes de las mismas, si se preserva el espíritu de lucha y la esperanza de un mundo más digno.

Se supone que la OEA sea una organización panamericana. Un país cualquiera de Europa, África, Asia o de Oceanía, no podría pertenecer a la OEA por poseer una colonia, como Francia en Guadalupe; o los Países Bajos, en Curazao. Pero el colonialismo británico no podía definir el status de Canadá, y explicar si era una colonia, una república, o un reino.

El Jefe de Estado en Canadá es la Reina de Inglaterra Isabel II, aunque esta deposite sus facultades en un Gobernador General designado por ella. De ese modo cabe preguntar si el Reino Unido es también parte de la OEA.

A su vez, el honorable Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Canadá no se atreve a decir si apoya o no a la Argentina en el espinoso tema de las Malvinas. Expresa solo beatíficos deseos de que reine la paz entre los dos países, pero allí Gran Bretaña posee la mayor base militar fuera de su territorio que viola la soberanía Argentina, no se excusó por haber hundido el Belgrano que estaba fuera de las aguas jurisdiccionales establecidas por ellos mismos y provocó el sacrificio inútil de cientos de jóvenes que cumplían su servicio militar. Hay que preguntarle a Obama y a Harper qué posición van a adoptar frente al justísimo reclamo de que se reintegre la soberanía de Argentina sobre las islas, y se deje de privarla de los recursos energéticos y pesqueros que tanto necesita para el desarrollo del país.

Me asombré realmente cuando profundicé en los datos de las actividades de las transnacionales canadienses en América Latina. Conocía el daño que los yanquis le imponían al pueblo de Canadá. Obligaban al país a buscar el petróleo extrayéndolo de grandes extensiones de arena impregnadas de ese líquido, ocasionando un daño irreparable al medio ambiente de ese hermoso y extenso país.

El daño increíble era el que las empresas canadienses especializadas en búsqueda de oro, metales preciosos y material radioactivo ocasionaban a millones de personas.

En un artículo publicado en el sitio web Alainet hace una semana, suscrito por una ingeniera en Calidad Ambiental,que nos introduce más detalladamente en la materia que incontables veces se ha mencionado como uno de los principales azotes que golpea a millones de personas.

“Las empresas mineras, el 60% de las cuales son de capital canadiense, trabajan bajo la lógica de aprovechamiento máximo, a bajo costo y corto tiempo, condiciones que son aún más ventajosas sí, en el sitio donde se instalan, se pagan mínimos ingresos tributarios y existen muy pocos compromisos ambientales y sociales…”

“Las leyes de minería de nuestros países [...] no incluyen obligaciones y metodologías para el control de impactos ambientales y sociales.”

“…los ingresos tributarios que las empresas mineras pagan a los países de la región son en promedio no más del 1.5% de los ingresos obtenidos.”

“La lucha social en contra de la minería, especialmente la metálica, ha venido creciendo a medida que generaciones enteras han visualizado los impactos ambientales y sociales…”

“Guatemala tiene una fuerza de resistencia ante los proyectos mineros que es admirable, gracias a la apropiación que tienen los pueblos indígenas del valor de sus territorios y sus recursos naturales como herencias ancestrales invaluables. Sin embargo, en los últimos 10 años, las consecuencias de esa lucha se han visualizado en el asesinato de 120 activistas y defensores de los Derechos Humanos.”

En el mismo artículo se va señalando lo que ocurre en El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua y Costa Rica, con cifras que obligan a pensar profundamente en gravedad y el rigor del saqueo despiadado que se va cometiendo contra los recursos naturales de nuestros países e hipotecando el futuro de los latinoamericanos.

La presencia de Dilma Rousseff, de regreso a su país, con escala en Washington, servirá para que Obama se persuada de que aunque algunos se refocilan pronunciando melosos discursos, Latinoamérica está lejos de ser un coro de países demandando limosnas.

Las guayaberas que usará Obama en Cartagena es uno de los grandes temas de las agencias noticiosas: “Edgar Gómez [...] ha diseñado una para el presidente de Estados Unidos, Barack Obama, que la exhibirá durante la Cumbre de las Américas”, nos cuenta la hija del diseñador, y añade: “Se trata de una guayabera blanca, sobria y con un trabajo manual más notorio de lo habitual…”.

De inmediato la agencia de noticia agrega: “Esta camisa caribeña tiene su origen en las orillas del río Yayabo, en Cuba, por eso inicialmente se llamaban yayaberas…”.

Lo curioso, amables lectores, es que Cuba está prohibida en esa reunión; pero las guayaberas, no. ¿Quién puede aguantar la risa? Hay que correr para avisarle a Harper.

Fidel Castro Ruz

Abril 8 de 2012


------

JG: No one can deny that Fidel is NUMERO UNO when it comes to history. I did not know that the 'guayabera' was originally called a yayabera, because it originated on the shores of the Yayabo river, in Cuba.

Again, Fidel is 100% correct, when he says that the fact that Guayaberas will be able to attend the Summmit of the Americas, but not Cuba, is something that is, in itself, laughable.

The "progressive" fools of the Democratic Party in the U.S., when Obama farts, they applaud him! And if you dare to oppose Mr. Big Ears, they will accuse you of being racist.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Former hard-line exiles return to Cuba to talk

Washington Post

By William Booth, Updated: Friday, April 6, 9:53 AM

HAVANA —
The setting was historic. The looming 18th-century Seminary of San Carlos in Old Havana. The attendance remarkable. A hall packed with professors, dissidents, clergy, bloggers, leftists, diplomats. The subject matter once unthinkable.

Just after Pope Benedict XVI left Cuba last week, the Catholic Church hosted a talk by Miami millionaire Carlos Saladrigas, who politely but directly said here in a public forum that socialism — the bedrock of the revolution — wasn’t working anymore on the communist-run island.

After his first visit to Mexico, Pope Benedict stopped in Cuba, formerly an officially atheist country.

“To be honest,” Saladrigas said later, “who could have thought such a meeting possible? Not me. Never.”

But the meeting was clearly a sign that there is cautious but visible change on the island.

Saladrigas, a Cuban exile entrepreneur and former hard-liner who has flourished in Miami, said that “big changes in the next few years” were inevitable, and he advised young Cubans to stay put. Although Saladrigas said that Cuba’s state-run economy needed to be opened to free enterprise, the 63-year-old investor also blamed the U.S. government and the anti-Castro Cuban exiles and their politicians in South Florida for perpetuating a standoff that has hurt Cubans on both sides of the Florida Straits.

“Change is not easy, I know this personally,” he said.

“This was an event of tremendous importance, the first time that a prominent Cuban from aboard could express these thoughts in a large forum,” said Oscar Espinosa Chepe, an independent Cuban economist who attended the meeting. He remarked that Saladrigas and the dozen people who stood at the microphone criticized both the Cuban and U.S. governments — and even offered a few solutions — in voices respectful and calm.

There were tough questions, too, directed at Saladrigas. Participants asked how the Miami exiles could really help Cuba while still supporting the 50-year-old embargo. The questioners wanted to know how U.S.-style capitalism could replace Cuban socialism, without turning workers into wage slaves and leaving the most vulnerable at the mercy of the markets.

In the past three years, President Raul Castro has begun to open the Cuban economy to its citizens. The government now allows small businesses — like car washers, shoe cobblers, pizza makers — to operate, even hire employees, though it restricts the size and ambition of the enterprise.

The streets these days are filled with legal bazaars (and some blackmarketeering) as fledging entrepreneurs dip their toes into the capitalist stream. Some neighborhoods in Havana look like a perpetual garage sale.

The for-profit produce stalls are piled high with fresh fruits and vegetables; the government bodegas that issue staples like rice, beans and oil still serve as a valuable safety net in a country where the average monthly wage is $25, though they feel less vital and look empty.

The state is trying in fits and starts to trim its unproductive workforce. It is beginning to shutter state-run cafeterias and has even floated the idea of ending ration cards. Fallow lands have been offered to free-enterprise farmers, though they complain they can’t get access to tractors or fertilizers. Citizens can now buy and sell their cars — just not new cars — and their homes, too.

------

JG: The Miami comecandelas are beginning to realize that they haven't accomplished ANYTHING since January First, 1959.

Bambinazo #34: HE BROKE THE BAT!

Photo: Ismael Francisco

Alfredo Despaigne, when he became Cuba's new Home Run King, broke the bat. He hit it that hard. And then on the eighth inning he improved that record with home run #35.

May he have many more!

Raúl Castro’s Keynote Address to the Young Communist League

Compañeras, compañeros, delegates and guests,

It has been a good Congress, which actually began last October with the open meetings attended by hundreds of thousands of young people and continued with the evaluation meetings conducted by organizations from the rank and file as well as the municipal and provincial committees where the agreements were shaped that would be adopted in these final sessions.

If there is one thing we’ve had plenty of during the little over five years that have passed since Fidel made the closing speech at the Eighth Young Communist League (YCL) Congress, on December 5, 2004, it’s been work and challenges.

This Congress has been held in the midst of one of the most vicious and concerted media campaigns launched against the Cuban Revolution in its fifty years of existence, an issue to which I will necessarily refer later on.

Although I was unable to attend the meetings held prior to the Congress, I have been informed of the essentials of every one of them. I am aware that there has been little talk about achievements in order to focus on problems, looking internally and without spending more time than necessary on the analysis of external factors. It’s a style that ought to permanently characterize the work of the YCL in contrast to those who tend to look for the mote in their neighbor’s eye instead of expending such an effort on their own tasks.

It has been rewarding to listen to many young people directly linked to productive activities proudly and simply explaining the work they’re doing, barely mentioning the material difficulties and bureaucratic obstacles that affect them.

Many of the shortcomings analyzed are not new; they have accompanied the organization for quite some time. The previous congresses adopted corresponding agreements and yet they’ve been reiterated to a greater or lesser degree, which proves the lack of a systematic and thorough control of their completion.

In this sense, it is fair and necessary to repeat something reiterated by comrades Machado and Lazo, who chaired many of the assemblies: the Party feels equally responsible for every flaw in the work of the YCL, most especially for the problems concerning the policy with cadres.

We cannot permit that, once again, approved documents become dead letters or shelved like memoirs. They should be a guide for the everyday work of the National Bureau and for every member of the organization. You have already agreed on the basics, now you should act on them.

Some are very critical about the youth of today while forgetting that once they themselves were young. It would be naïve to pretend that new generations are the same as those of the past. A wise proverb says: A man resembles his own time more than that of his parents.

Cuban youth have always been willing to meet challenges. They have proven it in the recovery from damages caused by hurricanes, confronting the enemy’s provocations and defense-related tasks; I might mention many more examples.

The average age of Congressional delegates is twenty-eight. All of them have grown up during these hard years of the Special Period and have participated in our people’s efforts to preserve the main achievements of socialism in the midst of a very complex economic situation.

It is precisely because of the importance of fully informing the vanguard of our youth about our economic situation, that in consideration of the positive experience resulting from the analysis of this same issue by the members of the National Assembly [of People’s Power], the Politburo Commission decided to offer the YCL municipal assemblies a report describing the present situation and its prospects, in all its crude reality. Over thirty thousand members of the YCL received this information, as well as the main leaders of the Party, the mass organizations and the government at various levels.

Today, more than ever before, the economic battle is the main task and focus of the ideological work of the cadres, because the sustainability and the preservation of our social system rest upon this work.

Without a sound and dynamic economy and without the removal of superfluous expenses and waste, it will neither be possible to improve the living standard of the population nor to preserve and improve the high levels of education and health care ensured to every citizen free of charge.

Without an efficient and robust agriculture that we can develop with the resources available to us, — without even dreaming of the large allocations of times past — we can’t hope to sustain and increase the amount of food provided to the population, that still depend so much on the import of products that might be cultivated in Cuba.

If people do not feel the need to work for a living because they are covered by excessively paternalistic and irrational state regulations, we will never be able to stimulate a love for work nor will we resolve the chronic lack of construction, farming and industrial workers; teachers, police and other indispensable trades that have steadily been disappearing.

If we do not build a firm and systematic social rejection of illegal activities and different manifestations of corruption, more than a few will continue to enrich themselves at the expense of the labor of the majority, while spreading attitudes that directly attack the essence of socialism.

If we maintain inflated payrolls in nearly every sector of national life and pay salaries that fail to correspond to results achieved, thus raising the amount of money in circulation, we cannot expect prices to cease climbing constantly or prevent the deterioration of people’s purchasing power. We know that the budgeted and business sectors have hundreds of thousands of excess workers; some analysts estimate that the surplus of people in work positions exceeds one million. This is an extremely sensitive issue that we must confront firmly and with political common sense.

The Revolution will not leave anyone without shelter. It will strive to create the necessary conditions for every Cuban to have a dignified job, but this does not mean that the State will be responsible for giving work to everyone after providing several job offers. Citizens themselves should be the ones most interested in finding socially useful work.

In summary, to continue spending beyond our income is tantamount to consuming our future and jeopardizing the very survival of the Revolution.

We are facing really unpleasant realities, but we do not close our eyes to them. We are convinced that we need to break away from dogma and assume the ongoing upgrading of our economic model with firmness and confidence, in order to set the foundations for the irreversibility and development of Cuban socialism, which we know constitutes the guarantee of our national sovereignty and independence.

I know that some comrades sometimes get impatient and wish for immediate changes in many areas. Or course, I’m referring now to those who want this without intending to play the enemy’s game. We understand such concerns that generally stem from ignorance of the magnitude of the work ahead of us, of its depth and of the complexity of the interrelations between different elements in the functioning of society that will be modified.

Those who are asking us to go faster should bear in mind the list of issues that we are studying, of which I have mentioned only a few today. We cannot allow haste or improvisation in the resolution of a problem to cause a still greater one. With issues of strategic magnitude in the life of the entire nation we cannot let ourselves be driven by emotion and act without the requisite integration. As we have said, that is the only reason we decided to postpone a few more months the celebration of the Party Congress and the National Conference that will precede it.

This is the greatest and most important challenge we face: to ensure the continuity of the work built in these five decades, the same that our youth have assumed with full responsibility and conviction. The slogan for this Congress is “Everything for the Revolution,” and that means, first and foremost, strengthening and consolidating the national economy.

Cuban youth are destined to take over from the generation that founded the Revolution, and in order to lead the masses with great strength, a convincing and mobilizing vanguard is required, for mobilization through personal example; a vanguard headed by firm, capable and prestigious managers, true leaders, not improvised ones; leaders who have passed through the irreplaceable forge of the working class where the most genuine values of a revolutionary are bred. Life has eloquently shown us the dangers that come with the violation of that principle.

Fidel said it clearly in his closing remarks at the Second YCL Congress, on April 4, 1972, and I quote:

“No one will learn to swim on the ground, and no one will walk on the sea. A man is shaped by his environment; a man is made by his own life, by his own activity.”

And he concluded: “It is by creating that we will learn to respect what work creates. We will teach respect for those goods as we teach how to create them.”

This idea that he stated thirty-eight years ago, and that was surely received with an ovation by that Congress, is another clear example of agreements that we reach and then do not fulfill.

Today more than ever we need cadres capable of carrying out effective ideological work that cannot be a dialogue of the deaf nor a mechanical repetition of slogans. We need managers who reason with sound arguments, without considering themselves the absolute owners of the truth; who know how to listen even if they don’t like what some people say; who are capable of examining other peoples’ views with an open mind, which does not exclude the need to energetically refute with sound arguments those views considered unacceptable.

Such leaders should foster open discussions and not consider discrepancy a problem but rather, the source of the best solutions. In general, absolute unanimity is fictitious and therefore, harmful. When contradictions are not antagonistic, as in our case, they can become the driving force of development. We should deliberately suppress anything that feeds pretense and opportunism. We should learn to work collegially, to encourage unity and to strengthen collective leadership; these features should characterize the future leaders of the Revolution.

There are youth all over the island with the necessary disposition and capacity to take on leading positions. The challenge is to find them, to train them and to gradually assign them greater responsibilities. The masses will take it upon themselves to confirm whether the selection was right.

We observe that progress is being made in the ethnic and gender composition of the organization. In this sense, we can neither afford regression nor superficiality; the YCL should always work on this. By the way, I recall that this was another thing that we agreed upon thirty-five years ago, in the First Party Congress; but we left its accomplishment to spontaneity and did not follow up on it as we should have, even when this was one of Fidel’s first statements since the victory of the Revolution and one he repeated a number of times.

As I told you at the beginning, this Congress has coincided with a huge smear campaign against Cuba, a campaign orchestrated, directed and financed by the centers of imperial power in the United States and Europe, hypocritically waving the banner of human rights.

They have cynically and shamefully manipulated the death of an inmate sentenced to jail on fourteen counts of common crimes, who by design and thanks to a repeated lie and an interest in receiving economic support from overseas was turned into a “political dissident,” a man who was incited to go on a hunger strike with absurd demands.

Despite our doctors’ efforts he died, something we also regretted at the time, and we denounced the only beneficiaries of this event, the same who are currently encouraging another individual to persist on a similar path of unacceptable blackmail. The latter is not in prison, despite all the slander. He is a free person who has already served his sentence for common crimes, specifically for assault and battery against a woman who is a doctor and director of a hospital, who he also threatened to kill, and later an old woman, nearly seventy years old, who as a consequence had to be subjected to surgery to remove her spleen. Just as in the previous case, everything is being done to save his life; but if he does not modify his self-destructive behavior, he will be responsible, together with his sponsors, for the outcome we also do not wish to see.

It is disgusting to see the double standard of those in Europe who keep a complicit silence about tortures in the so-called war on terrorism; who allowed clandestine CIA flights carrying prisoners, and even permitted the use of their territory for the establishment of secret prison centers.

What would they say if in breach of ethical standards, we had forcibly fed these people, as they have done habitually in many torture centers, including the one they have at the Naval Base at Guantánamo? By the way, these are the same who in their own countries, as we see on television almost on a daily basis, use police agents to charge on horseback against demonstrators, to beat them and shoot at them with tear-gas and even bullets. What do they say about the frequent abuse and humiliation to which they subject their immigrants?

The major Western press not only attacks Cuba; it has also initiated a new modality of implacable media terror against political leaders, intellectuals, artists and other personalities all over the world who speak out against fallacy and hypocrisy, and simply examine events with objectivity.

Meanwhile, it would seem that the standard-bearers of the highly vaunted freedom of the press have forgotten that the commercial and economic blockade against Cuba and all of its inhumane effects on our people is in full force and even reinforced; that the current U.S. Administration has not ceased in the slightest the support for subversion; that the unfair, discriminatory and interventionist Common Position adopted by the European Union, sponsored from the inception by the U.S. government and the Spanish far right-wing remains in place, calling for a regime change in our country, or to put it bluntly, for the destruction of the Revolution.

More than half a century of permanent combat has taught our people that hesitation is synonymous with defeat.

We will never yield to blackmail from any country or group of countries, no matter how powerful they might be, and regardless of the consequences. We have the right to defend ourselves. If they try to corner us, they should know that we will defend ourselves, first of all with truth and principles. Once again we shall keep ourselves firm, calm and patient. Our history is rich in such examples!

That’s how our heroic mambises fought in our independence wars of the nineteenth century.

That’s how we defeated the last offensive of ten thousand fully armed troops sent against us by [Batista’s] tyranny, initially confronted by barely 200 rebel fighters who under the direct leadership of Commander in Chief Fidel Castro Ruz, and for seventy-five days, — from May 24 through August 6, 1958 – waged more than a hundred war actions, including four battles in a small territory of between 406 and 437 square miles, that is, a smaller area than that of the City of Havana. That great operation determined the course of the war and just a little more than four months later the Revolution was victorious. This inspired Commander Ernesto Che Guevara to write in his war diary, and I quote: “Batista’s army ended this final offensive over the Sierra Maestra with its backbone shattered.”

Nor were we frightened by the Yankee fleet facing the coasts of Playa Girón [Bay of Pigs] in 1961. It was under their very nose that we annihilated their mercenary army in what would be the first defeat of a U.S. military expedition on this continent.

And we did it again in 1962, during the October [Missile] Crisis. We did not give an inch despite the brutal threats of an enemy aiming their nuclear weapons at us and gearing for action to invade the island; nor did we flinch when the leaders of the Soviet Union — our main ally at that extremely difficult juncture, and upon whose support the fate of the Revolution depended — negotiated a solution to the crisis behind our backs. They respectfully tried to persuade us to accept inspection, on our national territory, of the withdrawal of their nuclear weapons, and we responded that such inspection could eventually take place on board their ships in international waters, but never in Cuba.

We are sure that it would be very difficult for worse circumstances than those to repeat themselves.

More recently, the Cuban people offered an everlasting example of their capacity for resistance and their self confidence when, as a result of the demise of the socialist camp and the dismemberment of the Soviet Union, Cuba suffered a 35% drop in its GDP; the reduction of its foreign trade by 85%; the loss of markets for its main export items such as sugar, nickel, citrus and others whose prices plummeted by half; the loss of soft credits with the subsequent interruption of numerous crucial investments like our first nuclear power station and the Cienfuegos refinery; the collapse of transportation, construction and agriculture as we abruptly lost the supply of spare parts for equipment, fertilizer, animal food and raw industrial materials, causing hundreds and hundreds of factories to be paralyzed and the sudden quantitative and qualitative deterioration of food supplies for our people to levels below those recommended for adequate nutrition.

We all suffered those warm summers of the first half of the 1990’s, when blackouts exceeded twelve hours a day due to the lack of fuel for electricity generation. And, while all this was happening, scores of Western press agencies, some of them without bothering to conceal their jubilation, were sending their correspondents to Cuba with the intention of being the first to report the final defeat of the Revolution.

Amidst this dramatic situation, no one was left to their own fate; this gave further evidence of the strength stemming from the unity of a people when they defend just ideas and a work built with so much sacrifice. Only a socialist regime, despite its deficiencies, can successfully pass such a huge test.

Therefore, we’re not losing any sleep over the current skirmishes in the offensive by international reactionaries, coordinated as usual, by those who can’t bring themselves to understand that this country will never be crushed, in one way or another, and that we would prefer to disappear, as we demonstrated in 1962.

This Revolution started only 142 years ago, on October 10, 1868. At the time, it was a fight against a decadent European colonialism, but always under the boycott of emerging U.S. imperialism that did not want our independence and waited for the “ripe fruit” to fall in its hands by “geographic gravity.” It finally happened after more than three decades of war and enormous sacrifices made by the Cuban people.

Now the external actors have exchanged roles. For over half a century we have been attacked and continuously harassed by the now modern and most powerful empire on the planet, assisted by the boycott implied in the insulting Common Position, which remains intact thanks to the pressure of some countries and reactionary political forces in the European Union with various unacceptable conditions.

We ask ourselves, “why?” And, we believe simply that it is because essentially the actors remain the same and they do not renounce their old aspirations of domination.

The young Cuban revolutionaries understand perfectly well that to preserve the Revolution and socialism, and to continue being dignified and free, they have many more years of struggle and sacrifices ahead of them.

At the same time, great challenges hang over humanity and it is up to the youth, in the first place, to tackle them. They should defend the survival of the human species, threatened like never before by climate change, a situation accelerated by the reckless production and consumption patterns engendered by capitalism.

Today, we are seven billion people on earth. Half of these are poor, while 1.02 billion are going hungry. It is worthwhile to ask oneself what will happen by the year 2050 when the world population climbs to nine billion and the living conditions on the planet have deteriorated even further?

The farce that concluded the most recent climate summit, in the Danish capital last December, proves that capitalism with its blind adherence to market laws will never solve this nor many other problems. Only conscience and the mobilization of the people, the political will of governments and the advancement of scientific and technological knowledge can prevent man’s extinction.

To conclude, I’d like to refer to the fact that on April next year it will be half a century since the proclamation of the socialist nature of the Revolution and of the crushing victory over the mercenary invasion at Playa Girón. We will celebrate these extraordinary events in every corner of our country, from Baracoa where they tried to land a battalion, up to the western-most end of the nation. In the capital, we will have a people’s march and a military parade, activities in which all workers, intellectuals and youth will be the principal protagonists.

Within a few days, on May 1st, our revolutionary people throughout the country, in public squares and in the streets that belong to them by right, will give another resounding response to this new international escalation of aggression.

Cuba does not fear lies nor does it kneel to pressure, conditions or impositions, from whichever direction. It defends itself with the truth, which always, sooner rather than later, ends up being known.

The Young Communist League was born on a day like this, forty-eight years ago. That historical April 4, 1962, Fidel said:

“Believing in youth is seeing in them not only enthusiasm but capacity; not only energy but responsibility; not only youth, but purity, heroism, character, willpower, love for their homeland, faith in their homeland! Love for the Revolution, faith in the Revolution, and confidence in themselves! It is the deep conviction that youth are competent, that youth are capable; the deep conviction that great tasks can be placed on their shoulders.”

That’s how it was yesterday, how it is today and how it will continue to be in the future.

Thank you very much.

Source: Machetera

Pope Benedict XVI on the Cuba Embargo


Pope Benedict called for an end to the U.S. trade embargo against Cuba and met with revolutionary icon Fidel Castro on Wednesday.

Speaking in a departure ceremony at a rainy Havana airport, Benedict said Cuba could build "a society of broad vision, renewed and reconciled," but it was more difficult "when restrictive economic measures, imposed from outside the country, unfairly burden its people."

Source: Reuters

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Hope Springs Eternal

The Yankee imperialists, in April of 1961, could not overthrow the Cuban revolutionary government with the use of Miami exiled mercenaries.

Over the last 50 years they have imposed their failed embargo/blockade. That also has not produced the results that they were looking for: the overthrow of the Cuban government.

All the civilized countries at the United Nations have resoundingly condemned the embargo blockade, last year by a vote of 186-2. Barack 'Big Ears' Obama, like his republican predecessor Dubbya, continues this insane and genocidal policy. Mittens will probably continue it too, since he wants the votes and the money of the Miami fascists.

So, the Yankee imperialists have to rely on writing silly stories about Cuba in their capitalist-controlled press. They operate on the principle of "If you wish it, it will come."

What a bunch of fools compose the two branches of The Capitalist Party, democrats and republicans.

The Cuban government is not perfect. But at least now, the Cubans govern their island, instead of having a U.S. supported ass-kisser of the Yankees, General Fulgencio Batista.

The Cuban people are smart: they got rid of him. Cuba is finally free and sovereign.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

My School in Havana


Alfredo Despaigne Makes Cuban Baseball History. 34 Home Runs and the 51st National Series Ain't Over Yet.

Alfredo Despaigne impone nuevo récord de jonrones
en una Serie Nacional.
Foto: Ismael Francisco/Cubadebate

A esta hora ya no es noticia que Alfredo Despaigne es el nuevo recordista en jonrones para una Serie Nacional. Anoche, con el bate partido, se llevó las cercas del Latino con extrema facilidad y llegó a los 34 cuadrangulares, aunque parece no le bastó, pues al final despachó otra Mizuno 200, confirmándose como el toletero de más poder en la pelota cubana, o al menos el más constante en cuanto a producción de vuelacercas se refiere.

Debutó en el 2004 con diez batazos de vuelta completa y aumentó a 15 y 16 en los campeonatos posteriores. Ya por esos días en Santiago de Cuba se cuestionaban por qué desaprovecharon tanto talento, pero mayores serían los dolores de cabeza de los indómitos al verlo largar 24, 32, 31 y 27 jonrones en las siguientes campañas, siempre con más de 70 remolcadas.

Un verdadero monstruo, que en esta versión ha sido capaz de desaparecer pelotas por cualquiera de los ángulos (19 por el bosque izquierdo, 13 por el central y tres por el derecho) y en las más enredadas circunstancias, ya que varios de sus batazos han servido para sacar a flote a los Alazanes granmenses, envueltos en una férrea lucha por la clasificación oriental. Con el primero conectado anoche a Ian Rendón ya suman 19 los que han encontrado hombres en circulación, evidencia de que sabe producir a la hora buena, cuando su conjunto más lo necesita.

En la dirección de Industriales se habían propuesto impedir al fornido toletero cumplir su meta, pero era cuestión de tiempo, y supongo se hayan percatado en las prácticas de este martes, cuando llenó de pelotas (hasta 15, dicen) las gradas del Latino.

Da igual si el box está a 15 pulgadas o a 20, da igual si juegan con Mizuno 200 o Kenko, su poder no tiene límites, y lo más trascendental, se para en el home a batear, sin reservas, como si le fuera la vida en cada swing.

¿Es Despaigne el mejor bateador de Cuba? Considero que sí, reúne todas las cualidades, y no hablo solo por sus números, sino precisamente por su capacidad para asumir el liderazgo en cualquiera de las novenas en que se desempeñe. En la selección nacional es el alma, el bateador que más confianza inspira, el que todos quisieran tener en el cajón en el momento cumbre.

Pero no hablemos del Cuba, no hace falta ir tan lejos. Con Granma, con este Granma, ha sacado la cara con creces y a base de esfuerzo ha intentado que no se sientan las cien carreras impulsadas de menos que acumula el equipo por las ausencias de Carlos Barrabí y Yoennis Céspedes, demostrando su compromiso por la causa.

En el béisbol no todo es average, cuadrangulares e impulsadas, el valor, el coraje y la disposición para asumir retos son aspectos que se deberían medir y recibir un alto valor…en todos ellos nadie supera a Despaigne.

Un simple ejemplo: ¿sabía usted los enormes y constantes problemas que ha presentado Granma con los bates esta campaña? Dudo haya trascendido esta información, pero lo cierto es que según el manager Indalecio Alejandrez han recibido varios lotes de maderos con deficiencias y de baja calidad, algunos demasiado frágiles y otros muy pesados, quedándose el propio Despaigne sin un bate para comparecer al cajón.

Escenarios de este tipo resultan inconcebibles, pues el daño no se circunscribe solo a Granma, otros conjuntos también se han visto afectados. Comprendo que el béisbol, como todo el deporte de alto rendimiento, sea caro, pero la Serie Nacional debe estar inscrita en todos los planes económicos del país y por lo tanto garantizados cada uno de los elementos necesarios para su correcto desarrollo.

Por cierto, ya que hablamos de elementos que no contribuyen al buen espectáculo, me pareció lamentable lo ocurrido en el Latino tras el primer cuadrangular de Despaigne. Todo el público hizo suyo el record, pero ni un solo pelotero azul salió a estrechar la mano del granmense, un gesto inadecuado para con un pelotero que ya es historia.

Source: Cubadebate (Despaigne hace historia (+ Fotos))

[Cuba Journal Note: In the 8th inning of the game Despaigne hit Home Run #35. Orestes Kindelan has predicted that Alfredo will get to 40 this year.]

Coverage by the Federacion Cubana de Beisbol Aficionado

Por: Antonio Díaz

LI SNB

Despaigne, recordista de jonrones

El granmense Alfredo Despaigne despachó su cuadrangular 34 para convertirse en recordista absoluto de la pelota cubana.


La Habana (4 abr).- LARGO cuadrangular por el jardín central en el segundo inning representó el 34 del granmense Alfredo Despaigne, para erigirse este martes como recordista absoluto para una temporada de la pelota cubana.

Esa conexión fue ante el zurdo Ian Rendón, de Industriales, cuyo elenco cedió 10-21 carreras en el estadio Latinoamericano de la capital.

Curiosamente, partió el bate con la conexión, muestra de la fuerza con que pegó a la Mizuno 200.

En el octavo dio otro, para totalizar cinco impulsadas en noche en que el pitcheo de una y otra escuadra no resistió el empuje de los toleteros, pues además pegó vuela cercas por los ganadores Ramón Tamayo y por los de casa Alexander Malleta y Rudy Reyes.

“Tenía presión, como es lógico, pero sentí que era aquí, en el Latino donde haría el récord”, dijo a JIT el portento de 25 años, quien ahora será seguido para ver si concreta 40, como le vaticinó el máximo jonronero de la pelota cubana, el santiaguero Orestes Kindelán, quien acumula 487 de por vida.

Despaigne hizo añicos el registro de 33 conseguido en la Serie de Oro por Yoenni Céspedes y el cienfueguero Jose Dariel Abreu.

Impuso la hazaña víspera del 50 aniversario de creada la Unión de Jóvenes Comunistas y 51 de la Organización de Pioneros Jose Martí, por lo que dedicó esos jonrones a la generación del futuro.

“Estoy muy contento. Estos cuadrangulares son para los pioneros, los jóvenes y para todo el que sigue el béisbol cubano, especialmente al equipo de Granma”, significó.

Ganó ese pleito Jose Armando Peña (4-6), primer relevista de tres que emplearon los Alazanes y perdió Ian Rendón (4-5).

Un trío de errores cometieron los granmenses y cuatro los capitalinos, dos de ellos de Rudy.

En la tarde Pinar del Río blanqueó 12-0 a Mayabeque como Holguín 6-0 a Matanzas, Cienfuegos superó 8-4 a Las Tunas, Villa Clara 6-4 a Ciego de Ávila, Sancti Spíritus noqueó 11-1 a Camagüey, Metropolitanos doblegó 8-4 a Santiago de Cuba e isla de la Juventud vapuleó 10-3 a Guantánamo.

Los resultados de la fecha propiciaron que Cienfuegos, con 47 victorias y 35 derrotas, a un juego del primer lugar, escalara a la segunda posición del Occidente e Industriales (48-37/1.5) bajara al tercer escaño de la clasificatoria que comanda Matanzas 48-34.

También hubo variación, pero insustancial, en el Oriente que gobierna Ciego de Ávila con 49 y 34, seguido de Villa Clara (48-34), Las Tunas (47-35) y Granma (48-37).

------

Solvision

Alfredo Despaigne Sets Cuban Baseball League Season Homerun Record

Wednesday, 04 April 2012 12:18 Source: ACN


Granma’s Alfredo Despaigne set a new record of homeruns for a single season in the Cuban Baseball League when he belted his 34th four-bagger of the present season on Tuesday night at Havana’s Latinoamericano stadium off a delivery from Industriales left-hander IanRendon.

Despaigne not only smashed the previous record of 33 round-trippers —setin 2011 by former teammate Yoennis Cespedes and Cienfuegos’ Jose Dariel Abreu—, but he also improved it to 35 as he blasted another dinger off reliever Roberto Carlos Santiesteban.

With eleven games remaining in the regular season, Despaigne is verylikely to continue improving his record and also to reach the 200-homerun career mark, from which he is only one four-bagger short.

“We are trying to advance to the post-season and, rather than the newrecord, what I want the most is to help my team to be in the next phase and play for the championship,” Despaigne told reporters on Tuesday night.

------


Despaigne New Cuba Home Run King

Havana Times

April 3, 2012

By Peter C. Bjarkman*


HAVANA TIMES, April 3 — In the second inning on Tuesday night April 3 (2012) in Havana’s Latin American Stadium Granma’s Alfredo Despaigne cracked home run number 34 of the current National Series season.

It was the first of two loud Despaigne cannon shots on the night that highlighted a 21-10 romp over Havana Industriales before an enthusiastic crowd announced at slightly above 12,000 partisans. Despaigne’s two homers capped a season-long pursuit of a new league home run standard that the Granma slugger himself had surrendered only one season back.

The historic blast number 33 to topple the old record (set by José Dariel Abreu and Yoennis Céspedes in National Series #50) came off a delivery from Industriales southpaw Ian Rendón. Four innings later Despaigne punctuated his historic night by belting a second round tripper off reliever Roberto Santiesteban. On the night the Granma Stallion (known in Cuba as “El Caballo de los Caballos”) also added five RBI to his season’s total, leaving him now only 13 short of the league record of Alexei Bell (111) set in National Series #47 (2008). Yulieski Gourriel is the only other Cuban Leaguer to reach triple figures (with 105 in NS #49) in the RBI column.

Despaigne saved the island’s biggest stage (spacious and historic Latin American Stadium) for his record-setting performance and he also banged out the record breaker in spectacular fashion – a 400 foot line drive on which his bat broke off at the handle as he made contact with the Mizuno 200 baseball. Only a slugger of Despaigne’s extraordinary strength could club a ball that far on a swing that left him with only the bat handle remaining in his grasp.

With eleven games remaining in the season Despaigne now sits in a position to further extend the record he himself last held after the 2009-2010 season (when he belted 32 in the 90-game campaign). Despaigne lost that mark to Abreu and Céspedes last winter when he trailed the pair by a half dozen, despite missing the entire first month of the season while on a government-sponsored mission to the World Youth Congress. After being held to 27 long balls (in only 67 games) last season, Despaigne exploded in the post-season where he added six more for a final total of 33 on the year. In Cuban League play homers hit during the playoffs are added to career totals but do not count toward single-season records. Last night’s dramatic pair of blasts lifted Despaigne’s lifetime total to 199 (this is his eighth season) leaving him now on the doorstep of still another impressive career milestone.

* Compiled by Peter C. Bjarkman