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CANF INVITES THE MEDIA TO A PRESS CONFERENCE TO ANNOUNCE A PLAN TO PROVIDE HUMANITARIAN AID TO THE VICTIMS OF THE TORNADO IN CUBA

The Cuban American National Foundation is inviting the Miami media to a press conference to be held tomorrow, Wednesday, January 30, at 2 pm at our offices, located at 2147 SW 8th St.

During this event, we will announce a plan to provide humanitarian aid to the victims of the tornado that recently hit large areas of the Cuban capital.

The plan consists of 4 stages, namely:

Identifying the persons affected.
Immediately sending monetary aid to the most critical cases.
Demanding the Cuban government to open a humanitarian channel for assisting the victims of the meteorological event.
In the case of the opening of a humanitarian channel, distributing humanitarian aid on-site in coordination with the vast network of independent civil society organizations and the private economic sector.
The Cuban American National Foundation believes that it is imperative, at times like this, to open a humanitarian channel to alleviate the difficult situation of our brothers and sisters on the island. Until now, the response of the regime has been deficient, in some cases non-existent.

We take the opportunity to send a message of solidarity to all those affected by the catastrophe. For CANF first and foremost has always been the welfare of the Cuban people.

Elizabeth Estrada returned home from her first trip to Cuba on a Thursday and the following Sunday night a devastating tornado struck the same Havana neighborhoods she had been visiting and gotten to know people.

After seeing photos of the destruction left by the F4 storm — the second strongest category of tornado with winds of 207-260 mph — that plowed through eastern Havana on Jan. 27, she knew she had to do something to help. The tornado killed six people, injured around 200, destroyed 502 homes and damaged more than 5,900 other dwellings. It blew windows out of hospitals, crippled 78 schools and left piles of debris and crushed vehicles in its wake.

So Estrada and the nine other Cuban-American women who had traveled to the island under a program organized by the CubaOne Foundation, which offers trips to young Cuban Americans who want to explore their roots, decided to start a fundraising campaign via Facebook.

“We were devastated to see this had happened and we felt compelled to do something to help,” said Estrada, who has a career in arts marketing and radio and video work in Philadelphia.

While visiting the island, Estrada’s CubaOne group had hosted a concert celebrating women in music in Habana del Este that featured Cuban rapper and singer Telmary Díaz and her band Habana Sana. Now Telmary’s home is being used as a center for gathering relief supplies.

That’s just one example of a new phenomenon in the aftermath of the tornado: Cuban citizens organizing to help their neighbors recover. They’ve started drives to collect supplies, offered space for collection centers, compiled their own lists of those in need and fanned out across the distressed neighborhoods making deliveries of supplies collected from everyday Cubans.

From medical students trying to help tornado victims who lost their medications in the storm to college students delivering plastic bags filled with rice, beans and other donated foodstuffs, Cuba’s educational sector also has been heavily involved in efforts to help.

One factor in the private outpouring may be that unlike a hurricane when the whole city or coast may be affected, this rare tornado was narrowly focused on the eastern Havana neighborhoods and more people were in a position to help. But this is also the first natural disaster to hit since Cubans have had email service on their cellphones and using social media has greatly helped in organizing the private relief efforts.

Since setting up a Facebook fundraising campaign on Jan. 29, Estrada and the other Cuban-American women have raised $5,865 that will be donated to a Catholic charitable organization on the island.

From South Florida to New York and beyond, it’s one of many grassroots fundraising efforts spearheaded by Cuban Americas to help victims of the rare tornado that swept through the eastern fringes of Havana, causing the most damage in the Regla, Luyanó, Diez de Octubre, Guanabacoa, Cerro and Miguel del Padrón neighborhoods.

In South Florida, both Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Miami and the Cuban American National Foundation are running online campaigns; people around the country are trying to raise money for the victims through GoFundMe campaigns and in New York, a group of CubaOne alums are organizing “Havana Club,” a Feb. 18 comedy show featuring cafecitos and pastelitos along with the jokes and fundraising.

The Archdiocese had taken in more than $2,000 with its online campaign and also collected some cash donations.

The Cuban American National Foundation also is collecting monetary donations and wants to put the aid directly in the hands of Cubans in need. It is working with activists on the island to determine those who need help and also has circulated a graphic on social media where victims are invited to send their names, addresses, and photos of their damages to CANF. The funds are being sent to the island via Western Union.

The Foundation also has appealed to the Cuban government to open up a humanitarian channel to distribute on-site aid in “coordination with the vast network of independent civil society organizations and the private economic sector.” 

The Cuban Ministry of Foreign Trade and Investment is in charge of the coordination of the arrival and distribution of international donations of materials, which it says won’t be subject to regular Customs duties. Any donations of supplies from abroad whether from governments, businesses, non-governmental organizations or individuals must be coordinated through Cuban embassies abroad, according to the ministry.

In Cuba, even humanitarian aid can be polemical.

The Cuban government executed its tornado recovery plan much as it has responded to more common hurricanes in the past: work brigades quickly arrived to clear fallen trees and rubble, utility workers from distant provinces arrived to help restore power, water and phone service, and construction materials, food, cleaning supplies and water storage tanks were made available at subsidized prices.

But there was criticism about charging victims for food and water even at very low prices. In a short video shot when Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel and a government entourage visited Regla a few days after the tornado, shouts of “liars” and “shameless” can be heard in the background as the government cars pull away from the neighborhood. The video was widely circulated on social media.

The next day Díaz-Canel dismissed the video on Twitter as “fake news” and state media suggested the video with the disembodied voices may have been doctored. But last week, Cuba’s Ministry of Domestic Trade put out a statement saying it was supplying free meals to those who were severely affected for the duration of the recovery period.

Cuban officials also have acknowledged challenges getting construction materials into the hands of the people in the neighborhoods who need to make repairs and shortages of concrete and some other home-building materials.

Many Cuban Americans prefer to help by contributing funds or donations that go directly to private entities and charitable groups on the island rather than to the Cuban government.

Funds collected by both Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Miami and the campaigns associated with CubaOne, for example, will be going to Cáritas [a Catholic charitable organization] in Cuba so it can purchase what is needed.

Past South Florida drives to collect supplies for victims of Cuban natural disasters haven’t always gone smoothly. One such drive for Cuban hurricane victims a number of years ago ran into problems when exiles scrawled anti-government messages on rolls of toilet paper and other supplies.

When Cuban officials discovered the slogans they refused to release the donations from a warehouse. The problem was finally resolved when hurricane supplies intended for the Dominican Republic were swapped for the supplies on the island, according to Cuban church officials.

“How charity works in Cuba is quite different, so we wanted to partner with a group [Cáritas] that is already doing work there,” said Daniel Jimenez, chief executive and founder of CubaOne. “We want our donations to get into the neighborhoods to help people rebuild their lives.”

For Estrada, whose parents left Cuba during the 1980 Mariel Boatlift and who had never visited Cuba before, the plight of the tornado victims was all the more poignant because just the week before members of her CubanOne trip had been in Regla to discuss Afro-Cuban history with a group of women and celebrated at a block party and dinner in Luyanó.

“My roots were always missing for me a bit. It was powerful to connect to my culture in a different way,” said Estrada. “Now I feel like a door has been opened and I can continue to walk back and forth through it.”

Source: CANF, Miami Herald