CCF Background

The hurricanes

Friday, January 14, 2011, 7 pm

PUBLIC FORUM:
Haiti's Humanitarian Crisis One Year Later


Panel discussion and video screening, featuring:

* Dr. Luma Maxo, Partners In Health
* Kaye Kerlande, Hearts, Hands and Minds for Haiti
* David Putnam, Water for the World
* Fatou Jah, Help Hear Haiti (UBC coalition)


Harbour Center, 515 W. Hastings St., Vancouver

Organized by: Haiti Solidarity BC 778 858 5179 or haitisolidaritybc@resist.ca

For more information on Canada and Haiti, or to subscribe to the Canada Haiti Action Network mail list,
visit: www.canadahaitiaction.ca

GRANMA: Havana. November 10, 2008

Paloma causes devastation but…it is fortunate that we have a
Revolution

by María Julia Mayoral

It is too soon to know exactly what material damage was caused by
Hurricane Paloma, the third of intensity to hit us in less than 10
weeks during the present hurricane season but, facing this new blow
dealt by nature, we Cubans can affirm that it is fortunate that we
have a Revolution. Nobody died because, as usual, nobody was left
unprotected.

Gustav and Ike provoked total losses of $8.6 billion and destroyed
approximately half a million homes. Now come the ravages of Paloma,
which made landfall in the southern Camagüey municipality of Santa
Cruz del Sur, leaving in its wake the most visible effects of gales,
intense rainfall and sea flooding.

The Chief of Staff of the Civil Defense has established the recovery
phase for the municipalities of Santa Cruz del Sur and Najasa de
Guámaro. Rescue work is beginning in those areas, while the rest of
Cuba has returned to normality; that implies, among other basic
questions, the safe and orderly return of evacuees.

Nationwide, more than 1.2 million inhabitants were evacuated, almost
18% of them (around 200,000) into 1,448 shelters, and the rest in
homes of family or friends, in the habitual gesture of solidarity.

In less than 48 hours, during the evacuation to state facilities
offering provisional shelter, 4,000-plus vehicles and 13 trains were
used, as well as 500 engineering machines and communications
technology.

Once again, homes have suffered much damage. In Santa Cruz del Sur,
for example, destroyed homes were all too visible, as well as the
loss of personal items, from cooking utensils, clothing and furniture
to new electrical-domestic goods. To a lesser degree, there are
similar reports from the Camagüey municipality of Najasa and Amancio
Rodríguez in Las Tunas province.

Large areas were left without electricity. In the field of
communications, initially, two municipalities, Santa Cruz del Sur and
Amancio Rodríguez lost their connection although alternatives were
brought into service. There is also damage to the road networks,
above all on the southern coasts of Camagüey and Las Tunas, according
to yesterday’s TV Roundtable.

The strength of the national Civil Defense system was once again
evident, plus the capacity of the Defense Councils at all levels to
anticipate, organize and direct in situations of national emergency;
a training that is likewise fruit of the Revolution.

While we do not have to lament the loss of life, the effects of
Hurricane Paloma should not be underestimated; in addition to direct
losses suffered by families and state activities, the significant
cost of evacuating and protecting people (transport, accommodation,
meals etc) has to be included, and income lost in fundamental sectors
like tourism, due to cancelled flights and interrupted services,
although all facilities are ready to receive visitors during the high
tourism season that is about to begin.

Moreover, it should be taken into account that in order to avoid
greater consequences many productive centers also temporally closed
down and agriculture has been hard hit.

All of the above underlines the importance of dedication to
productive work and services, as Fidel urged in his most recent
Reflections, as only in that way can we make an appropriate response
to the current adverse circumstances.

Reflections of Fidel November 7, 2008

GRANMA The Third Hurricane: It could loose strength but it is already raining in most of the country. It’s raining on farming areas absolutely drenched by the recent rainfalls. The water reservoirs filled up to almost full capacity due to hurricanes Gustav and Ike will be releasing water on cultivated fields and valleys. This already happened at the end of August and early September. This hurricane has been given the misleading name of Paloma.

After countless hours of labor, many crops almost ready for harvesting as well as fuel, seeds, fertilizers, herbicides and the work of the equipment used to urgently grow food will again be lost.

In many places where the families awaited for and received materials to repair their homes, and where they excitedly applauded the workers who were reestablishing electricity so vital to many services, will again partly live through the same experience.

Once again destruction will revisit highways, roads and other works in various provinces of the country.

The latest report from the Meteorology Institute’s National Forecast Center has confirmed the inexorable development of the event. Nevertheless, we should not be discouraged by adversity. Paloma is not covering such an extensive area as Gustav.

Our people should learn from every such event about the consequences of climate change and the ecologic unbalance, which are some of the many problems humanity is facing.

The initial estimates of the economic damages caused by the two previous hurricanes were short of reality. The losses amounted to 8 billions instead of the 5 billions originally announced. This time there will be additional damages.

The cadres who are decidedly and restlessly coming to grips with the problems shall insist on demanding from their compatriots that they respond to these adverse circumstances with hard work in both production and services.

And, if the chief of the empire and leading promoter of the genocidal blockade on our country were to offer again his pious assistance, he would again receive a dignified response: it would certainly be rejected. Our people demand that the blockade is lifted, especially now that humanity has unanimously called for it amidst a financial crisis which is pounding on every developed and developing nation on the Earth.

There are still some who dream of submitting Cuba using the criminal blockade as an instrument of the U.S. foreign policy against our homeland. If that country made the same mistake again it could spend another century implementing that useless policy against Cuba; that is, if the empire could last that long.

Fidel Castro Ruz

The Financial Times Limited October 20, 2008

The havoc caused by recent hurricanes is testing official ingenuity
over reconstruction.

Cuba's authorities have been responding to the emergency caused by the
two hurricanes that hit the country in August and September. However,
the scale of the devastation, with extensive flooding and destruction
of roads and bridges hampering operations, means that food supplies
will be down for at least six months. In anticipation of shortages,
farmers are being supported in planting rapid-yield food crops. The
reconstruction of=2 0infrastructure and housing will take longer.

Cuba's restricted access to international official or private finance
limits the authorities' ability to purchase emergency supplies of food
and materials. In this context, international aid has played an
important role. External credits are also being sought and there are
indications that there may be a widening of the opening to foreign
direct investment (FDI).

An initial estimate of $5USbn in damages is probably low, as it is
based on Cuban prices, which understate costs in relative
international terms, as property prices are fixed in Cuba at
relatively low valuations.

However, several of the sectors that are most critical to the Cuban
economy, such as pharmaceutical production, nickel, tourism and other
services, were not badly affected by the storms and will continue to
function. Inflows of family remittances from Cubans living abroad may
also rise and help to prop up foreign-reserve holdings.

The main constraint on the pace of reconstruction of housing and
infrastructure is the availability of re-sources. Although materials
available in stockpiles have been supplemented by aid donations, much
of the industrial plant for manufacturing materials has been damaged.

Agriculture reforms continue

In the agricultural sector, recovery efforts have coincided with the
ongoing reforms designed to reduce food import dependency. The
emphasis ove r the past year has been on decentralising agriculture and
in-creasing the role of markets to improve incentives to farmers, but
just as yields were starting to improve the state has been forced to
intervene more heavily. The government has had to step in to rescue
farmers from ruin and, in an attempt to restrain profiteering, on
September 29th it announced that prices in the free mar-kets would be
fixed until further notice, with any vendors charging more liable for
prosecution. Although this may stabilise prices of some goods in the
short run, it will not prevent a reduction in supply in the markets,
resulting in queues and empty shelves.

The emergency has not slowed the process of transferring ownership of
idle lands under Decree-Law 259. In mid-September, the Ministry of
Agriculture began to accept applications, and reported that more than
5,000 were submitted in the first day. The law allows existing farmers
to receive up to 40 hectares of unused government land for initial
periods of 10 and 25 years respectively, with scope for renewal
thereafter if conditions are met and taxes paid. People who are not
already farmers can also apply, although they are limited to a maximum
of just over 13 hectares.

Canadian Network on Cuba's appeal to Prime Minister Harper

16 September 2008

Prime Minister Stephen Harper
Office of the Prime Minister
Government of Canada
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
Harper.S@parl.gc.ca

Dear Prime Minister Harper,

I should like to bring to your attention the fact that in a period of nine days, beginning on the 30th of August, Cuba was struck by three hurricanes. The combination of these hurricanes, Gustav, Hanna and Ike, has caused unprecedented damage in Cuba which perhaps more than any other Caribbean country has been suffering from these damaging assaults by nature. A United.Nations body has estimated the present damage at US$5 billion, affecting all areas of Cuban economic and social life. The bulk of the damage was done to 444,000 homes, to agricultural crops and equipment, to stored food supplies, to schools, hospitals and other public buildings, and to roads and other communications infrastructure.

I write to you as Chair of the Cuba Hurricane Relief Committee of the Canadian Network on Cuba to request that the government of Canada make a donation to Cuba that is commensurate with the burden it now faces. This would be in keeping with Canada’s and with your own government’s tradition of helping countries that meet with natural disasters. This support would also contain a gesture of reciprocity on behalf of humanity, because as you know Cuba is always prompt in its offer of help to countries of whatever size or whatever ideology in circumstances similar to those it now faces.

Our Committee has established a fund for relief to Cuba that is directly financial or is in the form of materials to be purchased in Canada, such as roofing and electrical supplies. All monies raised by us will go completely, with no administrative costs, to the recovery effort. The government may want to contribute to this fund or may prefer to give its donation directly to the Cuban government. In any case, you may be assured that Canada’s donation would be greatly appreciated by the Cuban people and by the hundreds of thousands of Canadians who have come to know and to admire them.

The Canadian Network on Cuba is a nationwide umbrella group of Canadian organizations that work to foster good relations between Canadians and Cubans.

Mr. Prime Minister, I look forward to your reply.

Yours sincerely,

Keith Ellis FRSC
Professor Emeritus
Department of Spanish and Portuguese
University of Toronto

1512 Elite Road
Mississauga, ON L5J 3B4
905 822-1972
zellis@yorku.ca

From Susan Hurlich in Cuba

Sept. 17, 2008 7:27 PM

..The TV coverage here in Cuba on the impact of Hurricanes Gustav and
Ike is very instructive, not just in showing clearly the extent of
damages, but in giving a sense of the feelings and spirit of the
people through many, many different testimonies. I notice that in
much of the reporting outside the country, there's not much
commentary on this aspect, which is as important - if not more so in
the long run - as the statistics on damages.

One comment repeated over and over by men, women, old, young, often
while standing in front of a pile of rubble that was once their home,
often in tears, is that they know that their country, their
Revolution, won't abandon them in their time of need. For instance,
as of yesterday (Tuesday) noon, some 88% of the population was
receiving electricity - in many areas by generators (part of Cuba's
Energy Revolution as well as preparing for disasters - although many
parts of Las Tunas, Holguin, Camaguey, Pinar del Rio and Isla de la
Juventud are still with difficulties.

Yesterday, I was also struck by another comment made by an elderly
gentleman in Holguin, I think it was, who said (on TV) that Cubans
have long known how to help other people in need elsewhere in the
world, and that he's confident that they won't hesitate to help each
other in this great time of need.

And this is indeed what is happening. For example, in Havana, the
entire city is in the process of being organized at the grassroots
level to give people-to-people assistance to the provinces of Pinar
del Rio and Provincia Habana, with different municipalities being
"twinned" with designated areas in these two provinces. This is
happening elsewhere in the country, with provinces and areas that are
less affected helping those provinces and areas near them that are
more affected. It's a "people's response" above and beyond the
professional brigades of electricians, construction workers and
others who are being sent from one area to another, and it's being
done through the mass organizations such as the Committees in Defense
of the Revolution (CDRs), the Cuban Women's Federation (FMC), zonal
groups, residents' groups, etc.

Meetings are starting to take place at the circumscription levels,
such as what happened Sunday night (14th) in La Ceiba, located along
the Almendares River in the Puentes Grandes areas of Playa
Municipality here in Havana. My friend Caridad, who lives there and
who is a social worker and local community organizer, told me about
the three different meetings that were held throughout the day, with
three different circumscriptions. Some 60 to 70 people attended each
meeting, with discussions ranging around the need for solidarity, the
need for local clean up as quickly as possible, and the need to help
others. The first task to be done was cleaning up the neighbourhoods
of rubble and fallen branches. Some days earlier trucks and tractors
had passed through residential and other areas collecting the heavier
debris, but there was still lots of leaves and smaller branches all
over the place. After the clean up, a clothing drive will take place
in La Ceiba (and elsewhere) organized by the Women's Federation. And
today, Caridad told me that in the municipality of 10 de Octuber,
people are starting to organize donations of household goods for
communities in the municipality of Alquizar, located in the central
southwestern part of Provincia Habana.

In my own neighbourhood, Vedado, located in Plaza Municipality, we
did the final clean-up on Sunday, and now we're waiting for
notification of when the circumscriptions will be meeting.

It's small stuff, eh? The immense needs all over the country - some
people being evacuated at the last moment because of flash floods in
areas that don't traditionally flood, and having only the clothing on
their back to show for the home they used to have - and the few
things that any given Cuban family can turn over to others. Small
stuff compared to the latest official statistics - still preliminary
- that show over 444,000 houses affected of which over 63,000 are
totally destroyed, over 4,000 tons (preliminary figures) of
warehoused foodstuffs affected nationwide - not including destruction
of crops in the fields and significant losses in poultry rearing,
with hundreds of thousands of animals literally gone with the wind
(!), and damages to electricity, water systems, in short, the entire
infrastructure of the country including schools, clinics, hospitals.
Just imagine an entire country hit by Katrina from one end to the
other and you'll get an idea of the devastation! Preliminary
estimates by Cuba is that losses are in the range of $5 billion.

And Cuba itself has said, very clearly, that its own reserves won't
begin to cover the country's needs for recuperation and
reconstruction, let alone for feeding the population in the short
term. That's another point, by the way, that should be kept in mind:
inside the country we're being kept very informed about the
situation. We know what kinds of reserves Cuba has and how they're
used, as well as the decision-making process for their distribution.

We know the extent of damages, which are updated every time we turn
on the TV and/or radio or read the newspaper. We know about the
assistance that's already coming into the country and where it's
going, and about which I won't say much here as I know there's lots
of information about this available in the international media. We
know about the "offers" from the US, first of a paltry $100,000 and
then of $5 million, and why Cuba has said a categorical NO as it's
not aid but "aid with strings", that is, the US will only give it if
Cuba accepts a US inspection team - something which no other country
or organization in the world makes as a condition to hurricane
assistance. (Plus Cuba has its own proven capacity to make its own
assessments.)

….But if we distance ourselves from the very human face of calamity, we
also distance ourselves from the very human face of what people are
doing to try to recover from such great losses. Ultimately, we
distance ourselves from ourselves.

.....I'd like to tell you a few individual stories.

As mentioned above, over 63,000 houses have been completely
destroyed, meaning at least 200,000 people homeless. One of these
houses belonged to the daughter, Yannara, of a very dear friend on
mine in Baracoa, on the northern coast of Guantanamo province and one
of the first areas affected by Ike. Yannara is 27-years-old and is in
her fourth year of socio-cultural studies. Here husband Giomanis is
29-years old and works in a state structure repairing computers. They
have two small daughters, eight-month-old Ingrid and two-year-old
Isabel (known as Isabelita since she was born).

They lived in a simple house located behind Hotel La Rusa - for those
of you who know Baracoa - about a block and a half from the Malecon
or seawall. After Ike, only the front wall remained of their house,
and all the other houses between them and the Malecon were also
destroyed. The only things Yannara and Giomanis were able to salvage
from the rubble is some clothing, a couple of fans, four chairs (but
the table was lost).

Everything else disappeared: the air conditioner, all kitchen pots
and pans and utensils, all bathroom fixtures, etc. Even the fridge
was carried away by ocean swells, etc. The day after Ike passed, two
government commissions came by, the first to make note of damages and
destruction to houses, and the second to make note of what people
lost from inside their homes. Yannara and her family are now
temporarily crowded into her parent's home.

Others without immediate family in Baracoa have been taken to
evacuation centres in the area. Nuns from the local Catholic Church
gave out some detergent, tooth brushes and toothpaste to people who
were affected. Yannara says that the agricultural markets are largely
empty and that some people who have small farms on the outskirts of
Baracoa are walking around selling tomatoes and onions and a few
other things. The government is already distributing doors and
windows to people who had lesser damages to their houses, and roofing
sheets have also arrived. Inbetween her tears she kept saying "but
we'll come out of this, we're already getting assistance," This was
the situation as of last Sunday (14th).

Multiply this story by 200,000.

Another friend in Baracoa, 78-year-old Cuca, didn't suffer damage to
her house. But the five-hectare family farm in Maisi, which in
addition to growing coffee for the state is also a source of fruit
and vegetables and meat for the extended family, was seriously
damaged. All the coffee plants were knocked down as well as many of
the large fruit trees that shaded the coffee plants. She says that
everyone in that area has similar losses. Then she paused for a
moment on the phone, and said "There is the United States it's
individual, but here at least everyone helps each other. People share
the little bit of kerosene or alcohol that they have for cooking, and
we also share our food so that no one goes hungry while we're trying
to get back to normal."

The culture of collectivism. I've talked about this before. It's
another thing that helps Cubans get through tough times like this -
and there's nothing "little" about it! No one needs to make
"individual claims" to private insurance companies. They're in it
together. And so is the state.

And a final story I'd like to share with you, this one from beautiful
Vinales in the province of Pinar del Rio. Last weekend I got a call
from my dear friend Jesus. An extraordinary man. He's a poet, artist
and researcher - as well as a member of the Municipal Historical
Commission - who, motived by his love of nature, has dedicated the
past 40 years of his life to investigating fossils, animal life and
medicinal plants throughout the Vinales valley area.

Alongside his home, located just a stone's throw (baseball throw?)
from the local Baseball Stadium, he has developed a wonderful,
magical garden where he displays endemic plants and fossils that he's
collected from all around the area, and where the entry is "guarded"
by a three-metre-high cement baby Tyrannosaurus rex. Locally known as
the Parque Prehistorico de Referencia National, some years ago his
garden was declared a National Reference Site by the Ministry of
Agriculture as a model of a creative way to use a small bit of land
surrounding one's home. His garden is regularly visited by students,
researchers, UNESCO and European Union representatives and interested
Cubans and international tourists.

Then came first Gustav and then Ike, and Vinales was without
electricity for over two weeks. I tried calling Jesus but couldn't
get through, as his phone goes on and off with the electrical supply.
Finally, the rains stopped and some small generators were brought in,
giving people at least some electricity during the day. It's still
not constant as the generators can't meet the full-time needs of
everyone at the same time. So it rotates.

Jesus lots of zinc roofing sheet on half of his house. His daughter
Luisa who lives next door lose her entire roof. During the cycles,
while Jesus was trying to save the plants, the family was trying to
keep the house in one piece, as there was lots of water entry through
the window shutters and doors. All the large trees - avocado, mango,
other fruit and ornamental - were lost, but some of the smaller
plants managed to survive. The damage inventory commission has
already been by, but it'll take years for Jesus to get his garden
back to what it was.

Which brings me to another face of the crisis which we must also keep
in mind. In addition to seriously damaging a built infrastructure, a
hurricane also damages dreams, rather, the realized efforts of making
dreams a reality. For me, Jesus's garden is a perfect example of
this. As Luisa said, if Jesus were going through this alone, he would
be as devastated as his garden. But he's not. He's already making
plans for replanting while they wait for the new roof for his
daughter's house and some construction assistance for his own.

This - the spiritual and psychological impact of the destruction - is
one of the reasons that well-known Cuban singers, troubadours,
musicians, comic groups and actors / actresses have been going around
to the cities and small towns that have suffered the greatest
devastation. When they arrive, the people, who have been informed
beforehand, are already waiting for them. Performances are given to
one and all, with the artists spending a full day in each location
they visit. While these performances don't solve the serious material
situation in which hundreds of thousands of cubans find themselves,
they provide a kind of spiritual help, and are yet another concrete
reminder to those living in remote areas that they're not forgotten.

Again, an apparently small thing. And yet resistance and
reconstruction - indeed the Cuban Revolution itself - has been made
by seemingly small things repeated over and over again. Because, at
the end of the day, it's only with the energies and willingness of
the people themselves that, as Jose Marti said, the impossible
becomes possible!

Abrazos para todas,

Susan Hurlich delfines@enet.cu

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