Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Hurricanes sweep food shortages back into Cubans' lives

Hurricanes sweep food shortages back into Cubans' lives
From Morgan Neill
CNN Havana Bureau Chief

HAVANA, Cuba (CNN) -- Many Cubans thought they'd left behind forever the
grim, hungry days that were the norm just after the dissolution of the
Soviet Union and, with it, the loss of billions of dollars in subsidies
for the Communist state.

But what government officials used to call euphemistically "the special
period" has returned, thanks to recent back-to-back visits of Hurricanes
Gustav and Ike, which devastated farm production. Now, years after the
economic crisis of the 1990s, Cubans are again facing the specter of hunger.

"There isn't a single province or municipality in Cuba that wasn't
affected," said Vice Minister of Agriculture Alcides Lopez.

Cubans still receive a monthly food ration, but there's now less to go
around.

Authorities say this crisis could last six months.

In response, the government has set price limits and harsh penalties for
anyone who breaks them.

The government imposed the price limits just weeks after it raised the
price of gasoline by 70 percent, to $5.50 per gallon, which made it more
expensive for farmers to get their crops to market. VideoWatch how
Gustav has affected Cuba's food supplies »

A cartoon in the state newspaper painted vendors who profit from the
food shortage as enemies of the people. But economist and government
critic Oscar Espinosa Chepe told CNN that the government shares some of
the blame.

"It's a desert," he said, referring to the empty shelves of one market.
"There's nothing for sale. The government has adopted fixed prices for
farmers at a time when the price of gasoline has gone up."

That means that many of Cuba's most productive farmers -- those who work
in part for profit -- can no longer afford to sell their goods, he said.

"Just look at how things are after the hurricane," said one woman who
said she'd already been to three other markets looking for food.

"With the hurricanes," she said, "there's nothing -- almost everything's
disappeared."

And she was talking about one of the best-stocked markets in Havana. In
many other markets, shelves are bare.

http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/americas/10/06/cuba.food.shortage/index.html?eref=edition_americas

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