27.11.12

CUBA OFFERS FREE CALLS TO CUBA

Etecsa Cuba Cell Offers Free Phone Calls To Cuba

 CALL CUBA FREE WITH ETECSA INTERNET CELL PHONE

Calling Cuba has always been a challenge however Cuban telephone have advanced quite a bit in the past 10 years with the help of Italian Telecom & Cuban Joint Venture ETECSA S.A. Together these Cell phone companies have brought Cubans out of the dark ages into the modern world of high tech communications.

 Just 5 years ago it was rare to see any cell phone in Cuba except with mostly with foreign businessmen and wealthy tourists. Today you see cell phone everywhere and on everyone including the average Cuban who has family outside of Cuba. In fact Cell Phone business in Cuba is one of the most important money makers next to food & tourism. Cuban Telecommunications and especially cell phone sales and minutes usage have skyrocketed in recent years.

FREE MOBILE CUBA CELL PHONE MINUTES

Provinces of Cuba
Provinces of Cuba (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
This Cuban Cell Phone growth in cellular sales to Cubans has given ETECSA the opportunity to reward the local Cubans with FREE CELL PHONE MINUTES.   Mobile Cuban iPhones have new apps that automatically reload Cuban cell phones in Cuba and yet are Paid with Reloaded Credit Cards from outside Cuba by family and friends over the internet.

 How does this Free Cell Phone promotion work?

Cuba Cell  has allowed the statistical buy one get one free promotion in their international cell phone advertising with a variety of websites offering family & friends outside of Cuba to "Re-Charge" your cell phone minutes in Cuba and get the same amount free in bonus minutes.

 For example if you buy a package of $50 for 50 minutes then Etecsa will double your cell phone minutes and award  you an additional 50 minutes for  Free as long as you pay the full amount online with your credit card.

This amazing promotion has been launched this week in advance to the Christmas season when many Cubans will be calling Cuba to talk with family friends & loved ones. Best to Call Cuba Today and take advantage of this incredible 2 for 1 Cell Phone Offer.

Call Cuba to Contact Your Family, Friends and Loved Ones.
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21.11.12

HAVANA CUBA HIT BY TSUNAMI WAVES DURING HURICANE


CUBA HIT BY TSUNAMI WAVES

Havana Cuba was hit by huge tsunami like waves during Hurricane Sandy. Monster waves came crashing down on the cliffs of El Morro  and then climbed the walls to reach hieghts of over 165 feet above the normal sea level.  This photo captures the amazing power of the normally calm Cuban waters off the bay of Havana.

Thousands of Cubans watched in awe as the massive waves kept pounding the 500 years old fortress that was originally built by the Spanish Conquistadors to protect the jewels & treasures of Havana.

No one was injured during the massive wave attack on El Morro. This type of 100+ foot waves hit Havana every 10-15 years with the last set of rouge waves seen in 1997 during hurricane Georges. Varadero Beach was not affected by the hurricane.

Today Havana has become a mecca for tourist that seek a higher level of adventure, culture, art, history and of coarse Latin Salsa dancing. Cuba is fast becoming the center of modern travel paradise with its Spanish arcitecture and amazing beaches.

Call Cuba to Contact Your Family, Friends and Loved Ones
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24.10.12

HOW TO CALL CUBA

Cubans Calling Cuba Cell on the Malecon  in Havana

  HOW TO CALL CUBA

 Its very easy these days to call Cuba. Most Cubans now have access to a cell phone from family & freinds that have a connection outside of Cuba. To Call Cuba just follow these easy steps.

  • Dial the international code. 
  • To Call from United States of Canada you dial 011 
  • Dial the International code for Cuba 53
  • Dial the Provincial Area code 1 to 4 numbers
  • Dial the phone number of the house line or Cell phone.
2. Dial the Cuban Area Code for your province or Area. Havana is  " 7 "

Call Cuba to Contact Your Family, Friends And Loved Ones with Call2Cuba.com
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17.10.12

CUBAN FREE TO TRAVEL ABROAD AFTER 50 YEARS

Cubans Free To Travel After 50 Years
HAVANA - Cuba will scrap much-reviled travel restrictions starting in January, making it easier for its citizens to leave the communist-ruled island in the first major reform to its migration policies in half a century.
The changes reverse tough restrictions imposed in 1961 when the government tried to put the brakes on a mass migration of people fleeing after the 1959 revolution that put Fidel Castro in power.
The government said on Tuesday it will lift requirements to obtain an exit visa permitting departure from Cuba and a letter of invitation from someone in the destination country, putting an end to a process that was too time consuming and expensive for Cubans, with no guarantee of final approval.
Now, most Cubans will only have to show their passport, national identity card and, if needed, a visa from the country they will visit to go abroad, deputy immigration chief Colonel Lamberto Fraga told reporters.
In theory, the changes should make it easier for Cubans to not only travel but to work abroad and return home when they want.
But Cubans will still have to obtain visas from most countries, which may not be easy because of fears that those who were granted tourist visas might not want to return to the island.
“For most, the key bottleneck will now be getting an entry visa from the target country,” said Bert Hoffmann, a Cuba expert at the German Institute of Global and Area Studies in Hamburg.
The changes, which Fraga called “profound,” are the latest reforms under President Raul Castro, who has modestly liberalized Cuba’s Soviet-style economy.
An editorial in the Communist Party newspaper Granma said the travel reforms were enacted as part of an “irreversible process of normalization with its emigrants (abroad)” and to facilitate travel for “practical matters” and orderly, safe immigration.
It put the blame for its previous policy on the United States, which it said has long tried to sabotage Cuba in various ways, including the enticement of doctors and other professionals away from the island.
Over the last half century, thousands of Cubans have died trying to cross the treacherous Florida Straits in flimsy boats and homemade rafts, while hundreds of thousands more have completed the journey, many of them in mass migrations in 1965, 1980 and 1994.
The United States now accepts up to 20,000 Cubans annually via legal immigration - mostly for the purpose of family reunification - and also takes in those who manage to reach U.S. shores without being intercepted.
Under the so-called “wet foot, dry foot” policy, however, it turns back Cubans picked up at sea. Almost 1,300 Cubans were repatriated to Cuba in the last 12 months after failing to make it to U.S. shores.
The new measures, set to take effect on Jan. 14, extend to 24 months, from the current 11, the amount of time Cubans can be out of the country without losing rights and property, and they can seek an extension, the government said.
Cuban American people.
Cuban American people. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
’BIG STEP FORWARD’
Cubans welcomed the changes, which Castro promised last year but then delayed because he said there were issues and details to be worked out.
“There have been many expectations for many years about a new travel law. It’s a big step forward that will save us money and simplify the process,” said Rafael Pena, an office worker, as he headed to his job in Havana.
“At last, our government is not going to treat us like children,” said Israel Gutierrez, a college student, while waiting to board a bus.
One woman said she hoped to finally take her daughter to Disney World in Florida.
Another, Margarita Nunez, praised the changes and said she had only one desire: “I hope I can go visit my family,” in the United States.
Prominent dissident blogger Yoani Sanchez, who complains that she has been denied travel permits by the authorities 20 times, said on Twitter she would test the lifting of restrictions as soon as they took effect.
“My friends tell me not to get my hopes up about the new immigration law,” Sanchez said. “They say I’m on the ’black list’ but I’m still going to give it a try.”
Fraga said restrictions would still be in place for certain groups that Cuba does not want to lose, including doctors, members of the military and athletes, and for reasons of national defense or security.
Cuba experts praised the changes as a big step forward.
“Like earlier decisions legalizing the personal sales of homes and cars, this is another step in the direction of loosening restrictions and opening up Cuban society,” said Sarah Stephens, executive director of the Center for Democracy in the Americas, a Washington group opposed to the U.S. embargo on Cuba.
It “responds to the Cuban population’s highest priority wish to be able to leave and return to the island freely,” she said.
The changes also mean that “Cuba now gives its citizens more freedom to travel to the U.S. than the U.S. gives its citizens to travel to Cuba,” said John McAuliff of the Fund for Reconciliation and Development, which advocates for better U.S.-Cuba relations.
Under its longstanding trade embargo against Cuba, the United States allows Cuban Americans free travel to their homeland but requires most other Americans to get a license from the U.S. government to visit the island.
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