Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Cuba: 'Sigh of relief' as Chavez wins in Venezuela

Posted on Monday, 10.08.12

Cuba: 'Sigh of relief' as Chavez wins in Venezuela
By PETER ORSI
Associated Press

HAVANA -- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's reelection was welcome news
on the streets and in the halls of power of Cuba, which relies on the
South American nation for a big chunk of its economy through trade and
preferential oil shipments.

Chavez counts former Cuban President Fidel Castro as a friend and
mentor, and his opponent, Henrique Capriles, had promised to change a
relationship he described as financing Cuba's political model.

"I'm sure it's a big sigh of relief (in the Cuban government), because
what they faced under Capriles was a certain renegotiation, at minimum,
of the oil deal," said Philip Peters, a longtime Cuba observer at the
Virginia-based Lexington Institute think tank. "It would have been a
tough blow."

Cuba was hit hard by the collapse of the Soviet Union at the dawn of the
1990s and subsequent loss of billions in aid, and Chavez's election in
1998 resulted in a welcome ideological and commercial friend.

With polls showing Chavez facing the most serious electoral rival of his
presidency, the Venezuelan race has been a constant fixture in Cuban
state media for the last month and a half. Campaign news led TV
broadcasts, topped the fronts of newspapers and was endlessly analyzed
on roundtable shows.

Cuban television devoted hours to the election results on Sunday,
covering the late-night announcement of Chavez's 10-point victory and
shortly afterward reading out a congratulatory note from Cuban President
Raul Castro.

"Your decisive victory ensures the continuity of the struggle for
genuine integration in our America," Castro said.

There was no immediate comment from Fidel Castro, who left office
permanently in 2008 and is rarely seen in public these days.

Ordinary Cubans also greeted the news, keenly aware of the country's
special relationship with a man who visited frequently even before he
began receiving cancer treatment from Cuban doctors.

"For us, it is a joy," said Rosa Hernandez, a 45-year-old Havana homemaker.

"In practical terms, for Cubans it means the continuity of a
relationship that could have been interrupted," said Leonardo Juan, a
state-run business worker. "It means a strengthening of very close ties."

According to government statistics, Cuba and Venezuela did some $6
billion in trade last year, or around 40 percent of all Cuban trade in
commercial goods, most of that comprised of Cuban imports of oil and
derivatives.

The figure does not include the legions of Cuban doctors and other
professionals performing services in Venezuela, but it still far
outstripped Cuba's No. 2 commercial partner, China, which accounted for
$1.9 billion in trade with the island in 2011.

Cuba and Venezuela have also joined forces to rehabilitate the Cuban
port of Cienfuegos, where they operate a refinery together.

Six more years of Chavez also means Havana can continue to count on
Venezuelan support in international politics, a reliable friend to bang
the drum for Cuban interests in the region and its disputes with Washington.

"It ties into Cuban foreign policy too," Peters said. "Cuba and
Venezuela have their alliance and their vision that they're trying to
promote in the Americas."

Havana surely is not alone in its relief.

Nearly 20 Caribbean and Latin American nations, including tiny and
struggling economies like Haiti, benefit from the Petrocaribe program
under which Venezuela provides oil and natural gas at preferential prices.

"In the Dominican Republic, they were ecstatic. ... The Dominican
economy probably would have collapsed without the generous terms of
Petrocaribe," said Eduardo Gamarra, a Latin American studies professor
at Florida International University.

"In the Caribbean, (Chavez) has all this collection of little countries
who are not important in terms of the economy ... they survive because
of these subsidies from Chavez," Gamarra said. "But guess what they also
do: They vote. ... They will vote very disciplined with Chavez when it
comes to an important U.N. vote, an important OAS vote, and Chavez knows
that."

---

Peter Orsi is on Twitter at www.twitter.com/Peter-Orsi

Associated Press writers Andrea Rodriguez in Havana and Ian James in
Caracas contributed to this report.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/10/08/3040481/cuba-sigh-of-relief-as-chavez.html

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