Cuban gov’t allows Internet access at post offices
HAVANA, Cuba (AP) – Cuba has authorised public Internet access at post offices across the country, though it has yet to apply what would be a landmark loosening of cyberspace rules in a nation where information is strictly controlled.
A decree posted on the website of the government’s official gazette this week authorises Empresa Correos de Cuba to “provide access to public Internet to all naturalised persons”.
Many post offices already offer public computers, but they are linked to a national intranet – an extremely limited list of Cuba-only websites.
Cubans there can send and receive international e-mail, but direct access to the rest of the Web is blocked, limits far stricter than those imposed even in China or Saudi Arabia.
Internet supervisors at two Havana post offices said yesterday that while authorities are preparing to apply the law and have even installed new, faster PCs in some locations, they did not know when the new rules will go into effect.
A spokesperson for the Cuban government was not immediately available for comment.
Even use of the national intranet is costly for locals: $1.62 per hour in a country where state workers are paid about $20 a month. It’s not clear if full Internet access would cost more.
Few Cubans are able to pay the roughly $6.50 that an hour of Internet time costs at hotels meant for foreign tourists.
More common – but still rare – are those with access to Internet-enabled computers owned by government officials, academics, Communist Party leaders and foreigners who work on the island. Even there, the government often blocks sites it considers hostile – especially those of Cuban bloggers who criticise the communist system.
Sitting on a curb across from a post office amid the gracefully decaying colonial buildings of Havana’s historic district, Fidel Danilo Gomez said he expected to wait two hours for a chance to use a computer linked to the intranet.
“We Cubans are crazy for waiting. If there’s no line in Cuba, it’s because the place is closed,” said the 21-year-old university student majoring in French.
But he said the idea of logging into the real Internet was appealing: “If I am going to wait for hours, checking a Hotmail or Yahoo account sounds better than using a Cuban account that’s good for nothing.”