President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro have exchanged greetings and handshakes at the opening of the submit of the Americas in Panama.
They are expected to “interact” more fully on Saturday to discuss moves to reopen embassies and widen travel opportunities between the two nations, having spoken to one another by phone before the summit, according to US officials. The foreign ministers of the two nations met on Thursday for the highest level meeting between the two sides since the era of president Eisenhower.
Adding to the momentum, the State Department has set the stage for the removal of Cuba from the US list of state sponsors of terror by completing a review of the island’s status. Obama is now poised to makes an announcement of a delisting, which would mark another important step towards improved ties.
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Round-trip tickets will cost $429, Hauf said.
The 90-minute flights on a 120-seat Boeing 737-300 initially will occur only on Wednesdays, with a Sunday flight expected to be added later in the summer, according to an airport news release.
Published by Reuters
US Secretary of State John Kerry and Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez have held talks, in the highest level meeting between the two countries in more than half a century.
The two held closed-door discussions after arriving in Panama for a summit.
Meanwhile, the US state department has reportedly recommended that Cuba be removed from its list of states said to sponsor terrorism.
Such a move could pave the way for the two countries re-opening embassies.
US President Barack Obama and Cuban leader Raul Castro are also due to hold their first formal meeting at the Summit of the Americas in Panama over the coming days.
Few details have emerged from the meeting between Mr Kerry and Mr Rodriguez. The last comparable high-level meeting was in 1959, when Fidel Castro met then Vice-President Richard Nixon.
Diplomatic ties froze two years later, but last year Mr Obama announced that a “new chapter” in relations would commence.
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Washington (CNN)The State Department is expected to recommend that Cuba be removed from the government’s list of State Sponsors of Terrorism, a U.S. official told CNN on Tuesday, a notorious designation that has been a stumbling block in the establishment of embassies in both Havana and Washington.
“Our expectation” is that Cuba will be removed from the list, the official said. But the official cautioned the Obama administration has yet to make any formal announcement. While that announcement from the State Department is not expected Tuesday, it could come as early as Wednesday.
Published by CNN
Yes indeed, the Cuban family magazine is back, but unfortunately this time the entertainment industry will not be included, this time the lucky ones are the Cuban businessmen.
Seems like going back to the old days, but following the changes undergoing in Cuba, also the media has to adapt and to cope with the needs of its consumers, and that’s why the Cuban press is willing to bet on business advertisements.
According to the national newspaper Granma, as from the 1st of May the project Ofertas seeks to become the ideal advertising tool for entrepreneurs, cooperatives and state enterprise companies.
With a monthly circulation of 60,000 copies throughout the Island the magazine will have 16 pages, it also will have a classifieds section, space where individuals and companies will have the opportunity to ads sales and services.
Home holiday rental site Airbnb has added Cuba to its list of destinations.
More than 1,000 properties in the Caribbean nation are already listed, but can only be booked by users in the US.
The San Francisco-based site is restricted from showing the listings elsewhere because of a US trade embargo against the island.
Nevertheless, Airbnb said Cuba could eventually become one of its biggest markets in Latin America.
“We are actually plugging into an existing culture of micro-enterprise in Cuba,” said the firm’s regional director Kay Kuehne.
“The hosts in Cuba have been [renting out rooms to travellers] for decades.”
One expert, however, said the site faced major challenges
Published by BBC