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Reforms loom, but not capitalism: Cuba president

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Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel on Tuesday said that while reforms loom in the Communist country, they would not be an embrace of capitalism.

Cuba is set to adopt constitutional reforms that will recognize private property and the market economy, to update its legal system.

Yet it does not want to abandon socialism, which in Cuban terms values health care and education but also frowns upon differences in personal wealth.

"In Cuba, there is not going to be, and there will not be, shifts to capitalism or concessions of any kind to those who would like to, in 1,000 different ways, move us away from historical ... policies of the revolution," Diaz-Canel, 58, said in an address.

"Simply expect from us efforts and decisions aimed at fighting, uniting, ... and winning, he told the crowd.

In a reform of the island nation's 1976 constitution expected to be quickly approved, the fundamental means of production will remain under central control. But foreign investment will be recognized as an important spur to development, according to details of the document published Saturday by the official newspaper Granma.

But the Communist Party will remain "the superior leading force of society and of the state."

The proposed changes come as Diaz-Canel, a former provincial leader, is in only his third month as Cuban president, succeeding two icons of Cuba's revolutionary generation, Raul Castro and before him -- his brother Fidel.

The draft constitution says the Council of Ministers, effectively the island's government, "will be under the direction of a prime minister," returning to the pre-1976 system.

Cuba had hoped that a diplomatic opening to the United States, agreed on with then president Barack Obama, would stimulate the island's struggling economy.

But Obama's successor, Donald Trump, reversed that detente, to the dismay of many Cubans.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel on Tuesday said that while reforms loom in the Communist country, they would not be an embrace of capitalism.

Cuba is set to adopt constitutional reforms that will recognize private property and the market economy, to update its legal system.

Yet it does not want to abandon socialism, which in Cuban terms values health care and education but also frowns upon differences in personal wealth.

“In Cuba, there is not going to be, and there will not be, shifts to capitalism or concessions of any kind to those who would like to, in 1,000 different ways, move us away from historical … policies of the revolution,” Diaz-Canel, 58, said in an address.

“Simply expect from us efforts and decisions aimed at fighting, uniting, … and winning, he told the crowd.

In a reform of the island nation’s 1976 constitution expected to be quickly approved, the fundamental means of production will remain under central control. But foreign investment will be recognized as an important spur to development, according to details of the document published Saturday by the official newspaper Granma.

But the Communist Party will remain “the superior leading force of society and of the state.”

The proposed changes come as Diaz-Canel, a former provincial leader, is in only his third month as Cuban president, succeeding two icons of Cuba’s revolutionary generation, Raul Castro and before him — his brother Fidel.

The draft constitution says the Council of Ministers, effectively the island’s government, “will be under the direction of a prime minister,” returning to the pre-1976 system.

Cuba had hoped that a diplomatic opening to the United States, agreed on with then president Barack Obama, would stimulate the island’s struggling economy.

But Obama’s successor, Donald Trump, reversed that detente, to the dismay of many Cubans.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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