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Despite
the best efforts of the power to its north, the sun still
shines on Cuba. It's the Caribbean's largest and least commercialized
island and one of the world's last bastions of communism.
The island's relative political isolation has prevented it
from being overrun by tourists, and locals are sincerely friendly
to those who do venture in - even blockade runners from the
US get a warm welcome! The Helms-Burton Act has allowed Cuba
to find its place in the post-Soviet world gradually, without
the sudden destabilizing shock of mass consumer tourism from
the United States. It's only a matter of time before American-imposed
travel and trade barriers fall. No doubt millions will come
when flights from Miami resume. Clearly, the time to go is
now.
Although
you can't quite hear the colonial architecture peeling in
the streets, even Cuba's larger towns are pretty relaxed.
The most frenetic it gets is in the middle of an enthusiastic
chachachá, and the loudest it gets is behind one of
the huge finned American cars chugging the streets. If you
want it even quieter, Cuba's backcountry and beaches are perfect
chillout destinations for hikers, swimmers, spelunkers or
those who just want to smoke a fine cigar under a palm tree.
Full
country name: Republic of Cuba
Area: 110,860 sq km
Population: 11 million
Capital city: Havana (pop 2,200,000)
People: 60% Spanish descent, 22% mixed-race, 11% African descent,
1% Chinese
Language: Spanish
Religion: 47% Catholic, 4% Protestant, 2% Santería
(many Catholics also practice Santería
Government: Communist republic
Head of State: Fidel Castro
GDP:
US$20 billion
GDP per head: US$2000
Annual growth: 2.5%
Major industries: Sugar, minerals, tobacco, agricultural,
medicine & tourism
Major trading partners: Western Europe, Latin America, Russia,
China, Iran & North Korea
Cuba
Flight from UK
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