8.10.16

U.S.-Cuban Commonality

Hurricanes and Politics!!
       This REUTERS photo shows that President Obama, in the closing three months of his two-term presidency, is still trying to battle Miami hardliners and a belligerent Congress in his brave and sterling efforts to normalize relations with Cuba, the nearby island that has much in common with the United States -- including Hurricane Matthew that this week slammed ferociously into eastern Cuba and the eastern United States after devastating Haiti and much of the Caribbean. That's Jill Biden, the wife of U. S. Vice President Joe Biden, waving to well-wishers Thursday after arriving in Havana aboard Air Force Two. In the red dress on the right is Josefina Vidal, Cuba's Minister in charge of relations with the United States. Mrs. Biden was accompanied by U. S. officials specializing in educational, cultural and women's issues.
      On this week's visit to Cuba Jill Biden told Josefina Vidal, "Your country and mine are so close and our people have so much in common, even Hurricane Matthew. And there are so many people -- like me in the United States and you in Cuba -- who want so much for that closeness to not just be in physical distance but also in social, diplomatic, political and humanitarian endeavors." Vidal replied, "Your words are kind and appropriate. I am fully aware of the many Cubans and the many Americans who share your sentiments. I do."
       Generally speaking, it's neither healthy nor politically correct for the U. S. media to mention anything positive about Cuba but those restrictions don't apply to foreign journalists -- such as Sarah Marsh at the London-based REUTERS agency. Sarah's coverage of Hurricane Matthew's massive assault on eastern Cuba stressed the typically superb job the Cuban government did to protect its people and help them recover. She wrote: "Many people throughout Cuba's southeast praised the government's evacuation plans and shelters, where many remain. Authorities in convoys passed through to assess the damage. Hurricane Matthew reduced much of the Cuban town of Baracoa to rubble, whipping up giant waves that demolished cement buildings and winds that tore off roofs, but there is one thing it didn't do: take lives. Largely due to a rigorous evaluating scheme, Cuba managed to avoid the fate of neighboring Haiti, where nearly 900 deaths have been reported so far in the wake of the strongest hurricane to hit the Caribbean in nearly a decade." Ms. Marsh pointed out that the roads leading to the devastated and very historic city of Baracoa, including the La Farola highway, are "impassable" because of flooding or mudslides and a key bridge over the Toa River collapsed. The Cuban government has utilized soldiers, horses, tractors, and helicopters "to help victims" in areas where food crops, including tons of bananas, have been destroyed or severely damaged.
Sarah Marsh on Twitter wrote, "This is all that is left of this lady's home in Baracoa." 
      Sarah Marsh's Cuban coverage is fair and balanced. She is among the best for sensing the pulse of the Cuban people, especially those in the rural or remote areas. Her REUTERS articles and her Twitter page are informative and replete with photos that chronicle the joys, struggles, and rhythms of everyday Cubans.
      This Ramon Espinosa/AP photo shows a woman tearfully coming to grips with the total loss of her home in Baracoa, Cuba -- an island of wonderful people now dealing with the effects of Hurricane Matthew.
      Sarah Stephens at the Washington-based Center for Democracy in the Americas writes the informative Cuba Central update on the CDA website each Friday. Cuba, while trying to deal with its own problems related to Hurricane Matthew, as always is the first to help Haiti. Sarah Stephens on Friday wrote: "In Haiti, Cuba is already present and pitching in. Members of the Cuban Medical Brigade, some 648 Cuban doctors and other professionals, remain on site. They...offer medical care and disease-prevention efforts in the aftermath of the storm." It is widely known, as referenced by Sarah Stephens, that Cuba has provided such help to Haiti since that poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere was hit by the murderous earthquake in 2010.
      If you Google "Cuban Doctors in Haiti" the first of many articles that comes up is entitled: "Cuba Medics in Haiti Put the World to Shame." You will discover the article is by the British media, the type article the United States media would not consider. The doctor above is Cuban and his patient is Haitian. The service is free-of-charge and ubiquitous, especially in the very poorest and most dangerous areas of Haiti. 
      This Cuban doctor is providing vital vaccination care for a Haitian child as the very appreciative mother watches. The photo is courtesy of canadahaitiaction.com and that non-U.S. source is free to report on the direly needed medical expertise that Cuba provides to Haitians -- with loving care and free of charge. 
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