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Cuba aids the Ukraine

Billski

Here I am, 1st again.
FEATURE : Castro’s doctors still give hope to Chernobyl children

NUCLEAR FAMILIES:: Young sufferers are still being treated by Cuban doctors 20 years after the Chernobyl disaster in the Ukraine and despite economic sanctions

THE GUARDIAN, HAVANA
Saturday, Jul 04, 2009, Page 7

Despite years of sanctions, the so......t country is still capable of digging deep into its pockets to help Ukrainian children affected by the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

Eleven-year-old Olga enters the beach house in flip-flops, her hair still wet from a dip in the Caribbean.

“I really like it here,” she says. “The food is great, the beach is awesome. I made some fantastic friends.”

A typical child’s reaction to a beach holiday, perhaps — only this is no ordinary seaside break. Olga is a Ukrainian “Chernobyl child,” in Cuba not for a holiday but to undergo intensive medical treatment with some of the country’s best doctors.

She goes to school here along with 180 other Ukrainian children.

“I miss some bits of my home town,” she said. “But I don’t ever want to leave.”

Olga is one of more than 18,000 Ukrainian children to have been treated over the years at the Tarara facility near the Cuban capital, Havana. The program was set up in 1990 to treat the victims of the world’s most devastating nuclear accident four years earlier.

Twenty-three years after Chernobyl, the Cuban program is still going strong. Remarkably, children born years after the disaster still suffer physical consequences of the meltdown that irradiated large parts of Ukraine and Belarus; equally remarkably, despite isolation and economic miasma, Cuba still manages to tend to them.

Olga’s freckled face is marbled with pink and brown patches because of depigmentation. Her arms and legs are also affected. She suffers from vitiligo, a skin disease that some believe is caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Both those causes can be attributed to her case: She was born in a small village in northern Rivne Province in Ukraine, near Chernobyl.

The cost of Chernobyl will be met over decades and over generations. There will never be an exact figure of the victims of the catastrophe. For many, the impact is not in their past, but in their future. The damage is not only physical, said Maria Teresa Oliva, a paediatrician and deputy director of the program.

“[The children] are very much affected by not only medical ailments but also by the psychological effects of their environment and their dissease, so they require permanent special care,” she said.

In Tarara, the children get treatment based on the seriousness of their illness: sometimes 45 days, sometimes six months — in Olga’s case a whole year. Next to her 13-year-old Marina from Kiev is half bald, but slowly recovering her hair. She arrived in March for a third visit to be treated for alopecia.

“I love coming here,” she says. “I feel much better since I started coming to Cuba. For me there is really no reason to miss Ukraine. The doctors, the teachers, everybody is great.”

While some disorders — such as the 30-fold increase in thyroid cancer among Ukrainian children — are directly linked to the Chernobyl accident, it is not known whether some of the other pathologies are caused by radioactive pollution or post-traumatic stress disorder.

“But there is a nexus,” Oliva said.

Ukrainian authorities have expressed their gratitude to Cuba on several occasions. But though it forms part of Cuba’s international revolutionary public relations, the difference between this program and others — such as the exchange of Cuban medical expertise for Venezuelan oil — is that there is no economic gain. The program even survived Cuba’s economic crisis of the early 1990s, the so-called “special period” after the fall of the Soviet bloc.

Austerity is still apparent across the island, but the Chernobyl project has survived thanks to an agreement between the two countries: Ukraine covers transportation, while room, board, schooling and medical services are covered by Cuba. Some unofficial estimates put Cuba’s expenditure at more than US$300 million in medical costs alone.

“Many people who are unaware of our ideals still wonder what Cuba might be after,” Julio Medina, general coordinator of the program, recently told the Cuban newspaper Granma. “It is simple: We do not give what we have in excess; we share all that we have.”
 
What was the point in that article? I sense the same "Oh, USA, why can't you look past the evils of the Castro regime and look at the good things that he's allowed people to do?" Behind that goodhearted charisma and stylish beard, lies an evil tyrant. Bully for Cuba for helping their strategic ally, the Ukraine, along with all the other countries and the roughly fifty American non-profit groups that provide the bulk of the funds that help the survivors of this incident.

And for the record, the embargo against Cuba has failed. Miserably. It hasn't changed one thing in Cuba except give a lot of Cubans unwarranted hatred for the United States. If the Chinese are going to flood our waters with subpar junk, then we should be allowed to import quality cigars from Cuba. To not do so is hypocritical from an ethical standpoint.
 
Um....wow.

That's a lot of hate for just a simple news report. I think it's just supposed to show that Cuba isn't pure evil like some people like to imagine it to be.
 
What was the point in that article? I sense the same "Oh, USA, why can't you look past the evils of the Castro regime and look at the good things that he's allowed people to do?" Behind that goodhearted charisma and stylish beard, lies an evil tyrant. Bully for Cuba for helping their strategic ally, the Ukraine, along with all the other countries and the roughly fifty American non-profit groups that provide the bulk of the funds that help the survivors of this incident.

And for the record, the embargo against Cuba has failed. Miserably. It hasn't changed one thing in Cuba except give a lot of Cubans unwarranted hatred for the United States. If the Chinese are going to flood our waters with subpar junk, then we should be allowed to import quality cigars from Cuba. To not do so is hypocritical from an ethical standpoint.

un·war·rant·ed (n-wôrn-td, -wr-)
adj.
Having no justification; groundless

I'd say that the history between us and Cuba, before and after the revolution, makes that hatred by some very much warranted.

As for the article... so Cuba has been doing a very nice thing for the victims in Ukraine. What is there to get angry about?
 
un·war·rant·ed (n-wôrn-td, -wr-)
adj.
Having no justification; groundless

I'd say that the history between us and Cuba, before and after the revolution, makes that hatred by some very much warranted.

Your opinion, sir, not mine.

As for the article... so Cuba has been doing a very nice thing for the victims in Ukraine. What is there to get angry about?

Nothing is, on the surface, wrong with that. But to look at it from my angle, how would you feel if you were reading an article written in 1941 about all the good social welfare programs Hitler was accomplishing over in Germany?

Pure puff piece, in my opinion. And yes, I invoked Godwin's Law in only two posts. :smile:
 
Raul Castro, Fidel's brother, is the current leader. Fidel is his "advisor".

Compare this: http://www.therealcuba.com/page5.htm to Hitler and Nazi Germany and tell me my comparison wasn't accurate. When I see someone running around with a Che Guevara T-shirt I want to slap the crap out of them.

Anyone seen the HBO documentary which aired last month showing boatloads of Americans with no healthcare, (but jobs) going to Cuba for free medical care?
I have been to there a time or two on business over the past 3 decades and I for one will take our healthcare anyday. I ain't moven anytime soon!!!!!!
 
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Anyone seen the HBO documentary which aired last month showing boatloads of Americans with no healthcare, (but jobs) going to Cuba for free medical care?

I've been to Cuba. The only other Americans I saw were businessmen. When you mention "boatloads" of people leaving one country for the other, I have a different picture in mind.
 
I've been to Cuba. The only other Americans I saw were businessmen. When you mention "boatloads" of people leaving one country for the other, I have a different picture in mind.

Me to, scarface sound familiar? Guess you may have seen me as a business man, I was the one in fatigues.
 
Is there a banned vendor with the word s o c i a l i s t in his websites name?
No, but that word gets bandied about on Badger & blade ad nauseam by people who wish to start flame wars. People couldn't police themselves about it, so moderators stepped in.
 
No, but that word gets bandied about on Badger & blade ad nauseam by people who wish to start flame wars. People couldn't police themselves about it, so moderators stepped in.

Actually, I thought it was because the word c i a l i s is in the middle of it.
 
Me to, scarface sound familiar? Guess you may have seen me as a business man, I was the one in fatigues.

:biggrin:

I love their taxi cabs. I got to ride in a 53 Chrysler, A 56 Chevy, a 49 Desoto and a vintage Checker. I don't know whether that's a testament to the build qualities of 50's era American carmakers or the genius of Cuban mechanics, but either way it's impressive.
 
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