Monday, February 10, 2014

Editor Of Cuba's Official Newspaper, Granma, Leaves The Island For Miami

Editor Of Cuba's Official Newspaper, Granma, Leaves The Island For Miami
Published January 18, 2014Fox News Latino

A high-ranking editor with the Communist Party newspaper Granma has left
Cuba to live in Miami.

Aida Calviac Mora told America TeVe Thursday that she arrived in the
U.S. through Mexico and plans to stay.

The former international news page editor criticized the state media
monopoly and said there is a "crisis of credibility" in the relationship
between the public and the Cuban news media.

She said whenever she approached the paper's directors with new ideas
and different perspectives for news coverage she was told "it's not a
good time" or "the enemy could use it against us."

Show host Juan Manuel Cao called her one of the most important Granma
journalists to leave in recent years.

The 29-year-old journalist joins her husband in Miami, a former Radio
Rebelde reporter.

Granma is the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Cuban
Communist Party.
Its name comes from the yacht Granma that carried Fidel Castro and 81
other rebels to Cuba's shores in 1956 launching the Cuban Revolution.

The news of Calviac's departure came a year after a travel reform went
into effect that scrapped an exit visa requirement that for five decades
had made it difficult for most islanders to go abroad.

The much-hated measure was long justified as necessary to prevent brain
drain as scientists, doctors, athletes and other skilled citizens were
lured away from the Communist-run nation by the promise of capitalist
riches.

A year into the new law, Cubans are traveling in record numbers. Some
have not returned, but there's no sign of the mass exodus that some feared.

Through the end of November, 185,000 Cubans traveled abroad on 258,000
separate trips, a migration official said last month. That represents a
35 percent increase on the previous year.

About 66,000 Cubans traveled to the U.S. during the period, a figure
that apparently includes everyone from tourists to islanders with
immigrant visas, from researchers on academic exchanges to dual
Spanish-Cuban citizens who can enter the U.S. without a visa.

Only about 40 percent, or 26,000, have returned to the island so far.
That means about 40,000 Cubans are still abroad — comparable to the
total number of Cuban immigrants to the United States in 2012.

Cubans who remain in the U.S. for at least a year qualify for residency
there, meaning for the first time some are able to live binational
lives, shuttling back and forth and enjoying the best of both countries.

There are still barriers to travel, such as affording the cost of
airfare and the difficulty of obtaining visas from countries that view
Cubans as possible immigrants.

Based on reporting by The Associated Press.

Source: Editor Of Cuba's Official Newspaper, Granma, Leaves The Island
For Miami | Fox News Latino -
http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2014/01/18/editor-official-newspaper-cuba-granma-leaves-island-for-miami/

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