Author: Circles Robinson

Cuba’s Beaches Open Amid Rumors

The National Aquarium of Cuba denied rumors circulated that sharks were arriving on the coasts of the island as a result of the oil spill affecting the waters of the Gulf of Mexico. In a press release the Aquarium also said there is no need to close beaches because of the presence of lionfish which has caused concern among the population.

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New Venezuela-Cuba-Angola Oil Co.

A new joint venture oil company has been established involving state run firms in Venezuela (Pdvsa), Cuba (Cupet) and Angola (Sanangol), reported Pdvsa in a press release. The company will pump some 20,000 barrels a day in eastern Venezuela.

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Mild 3.0 Quake in Eastern Cuba

An earthquake of 3.0 degrees on the Richter scale shook several areas of Cuba’s eastern region on Monday night, reported the Network of Stations of the National Seismological Service. The quake, the 28th registered this year in the island, did not cause material damage in the towns where it was felt.

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Poetry Fest in Several Cuban Cities

The 15th International Poetry Festival of Havana will take place next Sunday in six Cuban cities, with the participation of around 100 representatives from 40 countries, reported the local press. The event is dedicated to the poetry of Latin American countries which are commemorating the bicentennial of the beginning of the wars of independence, and to the centennials of Cuban writer José Lezama Lima and Spaniard Miguel Hernández.

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Cuba VP Estaban Lazo in Argentina

Cuban VP Esteban Lazo is in Argentina representing the island at the bicentennial celebration of Argentinean independence on Tuesday. Lazo has become the key Cuban figure at numerous international events this year in representation of President Raul Castro.

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Number of 100 Year Olds Up in Cuba

A total of 1,541 persons more than 100 years old live in Cuba. This figure represents 53 more than those registered two years ago, according to a study by the National Department of Older Persons and Social Assistance of the Ministry of Public Health. The issue will be debated at the Satisfactory Longevity: Integral Vision International Seminar to be held in the island’s capital next Wednesday.

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Venezuela Advises Cuba on BP Spill

Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez sent a commission of experts to Cuba to advise the island on how to address the oil slick from the Gulf of Mexico, which will possibly affect its coasts in a few weeks, announced the president. The delegation, headed by the vice president of the state-run PDVSA oil company, Eulogio Del Pino, will help to organize simulations to preview the consequences of the oil spill.

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Stormy Hurricane Season Predicted

The hurricane season that begins next June 1 will be more active than average due to the weakening of the El Niño phenomenon and the high temperatures in the Atlantic Ocean, affirmed José Rubiera, director of the National Forecast Centre of Cuba’s Institute of Meteorology. After a devastating 2008, when the country was hit by three hurricanes, in 2009 the Caribbean nation was only indirectly affected by Ida’s passage through the Gulf of Mexico.

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Cuba Government Moves Prisoners

The Cuban government will begin today the transfer of the political prisoners to penitentiaries closer to their provinces of origin and will hospitalize those who are ill, affirmed dissident Guillermo Fariñas, who maintains a hunger strike in favour of the release of the latter. The island’s gesture would be the first response to the dialogue with the Catholic Church hierarchy last week.

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The Man Who Will Never Have a Dog

None of the dogs was a Dalmatian, or a German shepherd, or any of the types that people in this country will pay forty or fifty dollars for (sometimes more). What was sure, no one would have paid ten cents for these dirty, mangy street dogs that looked at us from the pictures with sadness. (15 photos)

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