CUBA NEWS
 
September 26, 2006

CUBA NEWS
Yahoo!

Cuba wages war on tiny enemy: the mosquito that spreads dengue

Isabel Sanchez and Francoise Kadri. September 23, 2006.

HAVANA (AFP) - Fidel Castro isn't the only one ailing in Cuba, where authorities are on the charge, spraying from aircraft and military trucks in a war on a great big, tiny enemy: the mosquito that spreads dengue.

The communist government has summoned everyone from miltary troops to ordinary workers, to young people doing their military service and school kids, to pitch in in the fight against dengue, which in its hemorrhagic form can be deadly.

Thick clouds of white fumigation chemicals have become an everyday sight in Havana and around the country, day and night. Cuban health officials have not confirmed or denied cases of dengue.

"We cannot speak of an epidemic ... but there are people who have dengue," a physician, 35, told AFP on condition that he not be named.

In the hot rainy summer season "there are a lot of smaller outbreaks of diseases; prevention is health policy in Cuba, and extreme measures are taken to avoid epidemics," the doctor added.

Though dengue is a concern across the Caribbean and most of Latin America, it is arguably more sensitive an issue in Cuba where health care is a top "achievement" of the Americas' only communist government.

And Cuba is now in unchartered territory as Fidel Castro, 80, ceded power in July for the first time in almost 48 years to his brother, Raul Castro, 75, after intestinal surgery.

"I was quite ill, I had been bitten by a million mosquitos, I had some bleeding, but now I am doing well, I have been recovering; they gave me vitamins and they have been here to spray," one woman, 43, a resident of Havana's El Vedado neighborhood, said privately.

She wound up in intensive care for four days at Havana's Salvador Allende Hospital. "I had 22 intravenous treatments in the total 12 days that I was in the hospital," she explained.

The "Offensive against the Enemy" -- the Aedes Aegypti mosquito known for its striped legs -- campaign kicked off a month ago in official media, urging Cubans to work to eliminate any standing water where the bug can breed.

Armed with spray cans of chemicals, young people doing their military service make spritzing rounds to Cuban homes each day. Backing them up are workers at restaurants, businesses and government offices.

High school (secondary) students, decked out in red T-shirts and waving little flashlights, make their own rounds in the dark of night on Saturdays led by teachers, hunting for any existing or potential mosquito breeding grounds.

Vehicles that come from central and eastern Cuba to the capital in the west are stopped and sprayed.

Tuesday, General Jose Carrillo Gomez warned that it was necessary to "make the campaign stronger" adding that "we must all join the work, which is decisive for the Revolution."

Fidel Castro, as he recovers in an undisclosed hospital-like facility, is closely following the details of the battle, his brother Raul told the official newspaper Granma on Saturday. Raul Castro and Politburo members meanwhile met with provincial party leaders in Havana on gearing up the fight, Granma said.

The only way to fight dengue, according to the World Health Organization, is to fight the bug that transmits it, which breeds in standing water as small as a puddle.

Dengue's common symptoms are high fever, muscle aches, and headaches. The hemorrhagic form of the disease can be fatal if left untreated.

Cuba, Chile and Uruguay are the only countries in Latin America that do not have endemic dengue problems. Between 1977 and 2002, however, Cuba had four epidemics and one small outbreak.

The most recent epidemic in Cuba was between June 2001 and March 2002, with 14,524 cases recorded, 81 of them hemorrhagic, of whom three people died, all in Havana, a study found.

Cuba Protests U.S. Denying Visa Request

Yahoo! Asia News, September 26, 2006.

Cuba protested on Monday a U.S. decision to deny a visa to its health minister, who had planned to attend the annual meeting of the Pan American Health Organization.

Dagoberto Rodriguez, Cuba's top diplomat in the United States, said the U.S. action "violated the letter and the spirit" of the PAHO charter. He said it was the second year in a row that the United States has prevented Cuba's top health official from attending the meeting.

In a statement to the opening session of the meeting, Rodriguez called the U.S. policy a "vulgar hoax."

The State Department had no comment, consistent with its usual policy on visa decisions.

All countries in the hemisphere belong to PAHO, whose headquarters is located in Washington.

One Cuban dies in attempt to reach U.S.

AP, September 21, 2006.

MIAMI - Sixteen Cubans reached the United States in a rickety, old boat, but one man trying to cross the Florida Straits with them died, the Coast Guard said Thursday.

The group reached Marquesas Key early Wednesday, and the Coast Guard learned in interviews with the migrants that one of their original group was missing.

The body of a man in his 20s was recovered at sea a few hours later, Coast Guard Petty Officer James Judge said. The body was taken to the coroner's office, and a cause of death was not released.

The 16 Cubans were turned over to the U.S. Border Patrol. The U.S. generally allows Cubans who reach U.S. shores to stay, while those found at sea are returned to Cuba.

Cuban Official: US Attacks Our Business

UNITED NATIONS, 20 (AP) -- A top Cuban official said Wednesday that the United States was spending more on harassing Cuba's business dealings than on investigating the finances of the terrorists who attacked the United States on Sept. 11, 2001.

Vice President Esteban Lazo Hernandez told ministers assembled for the U.N. General Assembly meeting that the United States is orchestrating "severe reprisals" against companies doing business with Cuba.

"The Bush administration has stepped up its brutally harsh measures against Cuba, with new economic sanctions that further intensify what is already the longest blockade human history has ever known," he said. "The very government of the United States recognizes that it is spending more today in persecuting and punishing those who have business dealings with Cuba than in monitoring the finances of those who attacked the Twin Towers."

Lazo, the island's most powerful black leader, is part of the collective leadership ruling Cuba as Fidel Castro recovers from intestinal surgery. Raul Castro has been filling in for his brother as acting president.

In his speech, Lazo underlined Cuba's support for a country's right to use nuclear power for peaceful purposes, a reference to Cuban ally Iran, which is locked in a nuclear standoff with the United States over its uranium enrichment program.

He also said that despite the United States' "acts of aggression and the criminal blockade, the Cuban people shall never be defeated."

PRINTER FRIENDLY

News from Cuba
by e-mail

 



PRENSAS
Independiente
Internacional
Gubernamental
IDIOMAS
Inglés
Francés
Español
SOCIEDAD CIVIL
Cooperativas Agrícolas
Movimiento Sindical
Bibliotecas
DEL LECTOR
Cartas
Opinión
BUSQUEDAS
Archivos
Documentos
Enlaces
CULTURA
Artes Plásticas
El Niño del Pífano
Octavillas sobre La Habana
Fotos de Cuba
CUBANET
Semanario
Quiénes Somos
Informe Anual
Correo Eléctronico

DONATIONS

In Association with Amazon.com
Search:

Keywords:

CUBANET
145 Madeira Ave, Suite 207
Coral Gables, FL 33134
(305) 774-1887

CONTACT
Journalists
Editors
Webmaster