Friday, May 08, 2009

Cuba cutting Internet access

Cuba cutting Internet access
In a move seen as aimed at anti-government bloggers, Cuba is further
limiting access to the World Wide Web
By Ray Sanchez | Havana Bureau
5:22 PM EDT, May 7, 2009

HAVANA - Cuba is further limiting access to the World Wide Web for its
citizens, in what many believe is an effort to rein in a small but
increasingly popular group of bloggers who are critical of the government.

Only government employees, academics and researchers are allowed their
own Internet accounts, which are provided by the state, but only have
limited access to sites outside the island. Ordinary Cubans may open
e-mail accounts accessible at many post offices, but do not have access
to the Web. Many got around the restrictions by using hotel Internet
services.

But a new resolution barring ordinary Cubans from using hotel Internet
services quietly went into place in recent weeks, according to an
official with Cuba's telecom monopoly, hotel workers and bloggers.

There was no official announcement of the change. Cuba has the lowest
rate of Internet access in Latin America.

"Internet use is only for foreigners for the time being," said a worker
at the Hotel Nacional's business center. "According to a new order from
ETECSA [Cuba's telecom monopoly] only foreigners can surf the web at
hotels."

An ETECSA official confirmed the change but said he was not authorized
to comment.

Internet access is a delicate issue for the communist state: About
200,000 Cubans, or less than 2 percent of the population, have access to
the World Wide Web. Cuban officials say the U.S. trade embargo and
economic limitations prevents the majority of Cubans from accessing the
Internet.

For Cubans, who only last year were granted the right to stay at
tourists hotels and obtain cell phone contracts in their own names, the
ban is one of many frustrations of life on the island.

Reinaldo Escobar, the husband of popular Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez and
a blogger himself, said he was recently denied use of wireless Internet
service at the Melia Cohiba Hotel.

"The government did not expect that the blogosphere would make use of
the Internet the way it has in Cuba," Escobar said. "They thought the
costs would be prohibitive and few would use it. But a group of Cubans
is using the Internet to project their opinions and now they are reacting."

Internet use at hotels is pricey by Cuban standards: $5 for a half hour,
$10 for an hour. The average monthly salary for many state workers is
about $20.

Escobar believes authorities hope that bloggers turn to the free
Internet services offered by the U.S. Interest Section or other
embassies in order to later accuse them of being mercenaries financed by
foreign powers.

Dagoberto Valdes, the editor of an online magazine in western Pinar del
Rio province, said he and his son also were turned away at the Melia Cohiba.

"It is a new form of Cuban apartheid for surfers of the web," Valdes
said. "It is another sign of change by Cuba's government. But instead of
giving the people a green light, they're putting up another big red
light, saying, 'Do not pass.'"

Cuba blocking Internet access for residents on the island; move seen
aimed at bloggers -- South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com (8 May 2009)

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-cuba-internet-cutoff-050709,0,5740923.story

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