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Castro shuts sugar mills - workers hold 9th grade education - degree not any better
Houston Chronicle ^ | Oct. 12, 2002, 8:05PM | DAVID GONZALEZ

Posted on 10/13/2002 1:45:42 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

'It is as if a child died' - In sad end of an era, Cuba dismantles sugar mills

AGUACATE, Cuba -- The steam whistle that summoned generations of workers to the cavernous and bustling Ruben Martinez Villenas sugar mill is silent.

Inside, amid a tangle of rusted pipes and man-size gears, the damp aroma of molasses has given way to the odor of sparks as welders dismantle the mill that long sustained not only this town, but a sizable slice of Cuba's economy.

Faced with plummeting commodity prices and a glut of sugar on top of the disappearance of its Soviet subsidies, the Cuban government has closed about half of its sugar mills.

For the hardy field hands who endured months in the sun swinging machetes or moved nimbly in the roaring mills, this is no mere downsizing. It is the sad end of an era that was as much a part of Cuban history and culture as it was a linchpin of the economy.

The peals from a bell at the Manzanillo plantation heralded the call to arms against Spain in 1868, while the zafra, or sugar harvest, has inspired poets, singers and painters. But tourism is now Cuba's primary source of foreign exchange -- bringing in about $2 billion a year, compared with about $440 million for sugar; and so, even Cuba's change-resistant authorities are bowing to the need to adapt.

"The circumstances oblige us," said Óscar Almazán, president of Cuba's Association of Sugar Technicians. "You cannot remain in a position which is truly obsolete. We are talking about a globalized, computerized world, and you have to be prepared for this changing world. If not, you are a Jurassic Park. We are de-Jurassicizing ourselves."

Officials said they envision closing about 70 mills, and converting cane fields into vegetable farms or cattle ranches, while reassigning 100,000 workers to the remaining mills, other farm jobs or retraining then to work in food processing factories.

Jorge Robert Egdhill, a welder and mechanic, has only worked in the sugar mills. Now, he cuts through pipes piled outside the Aguacate mill.

"It is as if a child died," he said. "To see the source of life slipping from your hands is hard. In the end, you have to do what the government says you must do. But it is difficult to take apart machines you once repaired."

Like some 50 other mills across the country, the one in Aguacate had been idle for several years. National output had hovered at a shade less than 4 million tons a year, about half what it was during the 1970s and 1980s when the Cubans sold sugar to the Soviet Union. (Before the 1959 Cuban revolution, similarly favorable trade with the United States fed Cuba's sugar industry.)

The deal with the Soviets meant there was no attempt to diversify crops or industrialize more fervently. Thus, when the Soviet patron collapsed in 1991 and its largess vanished, Cuba was plunged into the economic hardship euphemistically dubbed "the special period."

"The terrible thing is not that it disappeared, but that it went away at once, without any time to prepare ourselves for it," Almazán said.

As sugar mills were closed, officials said they began to explore restructuring and to focus on those mills that could burn the milled cane stalks to power electric turbines. They also studied soil to ensure that only the most fertile plantations would continue to be cultivated.

This summer, officials announced that about 60 percent of existing sugar fields would be given to other agricultural production and that former mills would be converted to food processing plants.

Since many sugar workers have only a ninth-grade education, officials said the government is building new schools to allow them to receive a salary while studying for their high-school diplomas. Classes will include computer training, as well as vocational skills for the emerging industries, they said.

Whether there will be jobs for everyone, and whether the restructuring of the sugar industry will suffice to ease Cuba's economic problems are both uncertain, said Antonio Jorge, a professor of economics at Florida International University.

Cuba imports about twice as much as it exports, and has high debt, including loans from Russia that have yet to be renegotiated, while European companies have suspended commercial credit for nonpayment, Jorge said.

"Cuba's economy is at a very crucial moment," the professor said. "It doesn't possess the capability to keep on importing and that means major crisis."

Despite official reassurances, the families residing in the mill village nestled in the shadow of Aguacate's smokestacks said they are worried. There are no other jobs in the area, they said, and they are too worried about making ends meet even to think about learning a new skill.

"People older than 40 going to study, what can they do with that kind of head?" said Carmen Prieto, who lives with her husband, a tractor driver, in a narrow home that reeks of a crude oil stove. "Can you study if there is nothing to eat?"


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: castrowatch; communism
"Cuba's economy is at a very crucial moment," the professor said. "It doesn't possess the capability to keep on importing and that means major crisis."

Now is the time to force Castro to make democratic changes, not prop up his communist regime with trade. Subsidized sales to Castro won't help his slave labor, it will only free up his budget for global anti-American activities. His former trading partners will tell you what it's like to hold Castro's IOUs.

Fidel Castro - Cuba

1 posted on 10/13/2002 1:45:42 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: All
Correction, this ran in The New York Times</i.
2 posted on 10/13/2002 1:47:58 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
What we American's pay for sugar is an outrage.
3 posted on 10/13/2002 1:52:38 AM PDT by Destro
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Officials said they envision closing about 70 mills, and converting cane fields into vegetable farms or cattle ranches, while reassigning 100,000 workers to the remaining mills, other farm jobs or retraining then to work in food processing factories.

That great agriculture expert. Fidel Castro, took a healthy agrarian economy in 1960, a nation self-sufficient in vegetable production, and put all his eggs in one basket to try to reap the rewards of sugar.

In the 1060s, he destroyed the fruit and vegetable economy as Cuba was forced to plant sugar cane on unsuitable land.

Common sense has finally returned after 40 years of one man's singular incompetance!

Too little too late!

Castro's backsliding into oblivion has been an example of how not to run a country.

The people of Cuba have been manipulated and enslaved for too long and deserve a better life.

4 posted on 10/13/2002 4:10:22 AM PDT by CROSSHIGHWAYMAN
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To: CROSSHIGHWAYMAN
Yankee Doodle Castro***Havana recently topped Bangkok as "child-sex capital of the world." Consider the human tragedy, the desperation of poor people driven to such things in such numbers, and after 43 years of "liberation" and "national dignity." 18,000 riddled by firing squads. Half a million incarcerated. 50,000 drowned or ripped apart by sharks in the Florida Straits. Thousands more slaughtered in Africa for Moscow. Two million exiled. And we wind up with a nation that in 1959 had a higher living standard than Belgium or Italy, had a lower infant mortality rate than France, had net immigration, as child prostitution capital of the world. Friends, are you beginning to understand why we get a trifle "emotional" or "unreasonable" when we hear some imbecile professor or boneheaded politician yapping about "the good things" Castro has done for Cuba?***
5 posted on 10/13/2002 7:16:06 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: *Castro Watch
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
6 posted on 10/13/2002 9:03:30 AM PDT by Free the USA
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