The crime: “Contempt to the figure of the Commander in Chief,” included in the Cuban penal code.
The Cuban government has set the rates of mobile phone Internet services on the island
Cuba’s water company, Aguas de La Habana, withdrew its service to one town's residents. Residents now carry water home from a nearby reservoir.
The Havana regime ruthlessly exercises the use of violence against the defenseless dissidents across the country, but King's ideas have permeated activist thought and action.
"It's for millionaires, because a horses such as these cost from 3,000 to 4,000 dollars. We're talking about 75,000 Cuban pesos."
Rafael Saumell provides continuity to Cuba’s imprisonment history and narrates the long process in an essay which maps out what it means to be behind bars, inside the moats and the horrors of imprisonment in the island.
Cuba’s plan for sugar cane production this year is to exceed 1.8 million tons of raw sugar, but sources on the island reveal that not enough sugar cane has been planted and that the infrastructure is not ready for the harvest.
Services in this amusement park run without government intervention.
Cuba's baseball officials have issued "Circular No.4," prohibiting congas and music during games.
The mediators in a commerce transaction in Cuba are trust and personal credit.
Antonio Castro has hinted that Cuban baseball players who become professionals in the U.S. Major Leagues might be able to play for Cuba.
A platform to post blogs and copycat versions of Facebook and Twitter, are the available channels for Cubans to “play roaming the Internet” from Joven Club.
Human rights activists and independent journalists who are members of the non-violent opposition work hard to support their families with few resources.
They eat, live and dress better. They travel, have Internet access, and hire domestic workers. These are Cuba’s nouveau rich.
Every generation thinks that the next one is lost. Every generation has its own Zeitgeist.
An interview with the coordinators who carry out the project “inCUBAdora,” and the Drawer Novels Prize "Franz Kafka" for censored writers in Cuba.