Cuba bans indoor smoking

Rod

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 4, 2001
Messages
10,691
Location
Southern California
First Name
Todd
Cuba, Land of Long Cigars, Bans Smoking in Public


HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuba, which evokes images of cigar-chomping revolutionaries, banned smoking in public places on Monday, an uphill struggle in a country synonymous with fine tobacco where more than half of adults smoke.

Cubans are no longer allowed to smoke in air-conditioned areas, offices, schools and sports centers in an island-wide health drive by President Fidel Castro (news - web sites)'s government.

Castro, once a famous aficionado of Cohiba cigars, gave up smoking two decades ago to safeguard his health.

But many Cubans continue to be heavy smokers and it is common to find people smoking in hospitals, elevators and even crowded buses, despite previous attempts to curb the habit.

Cigarette vending machines have been banned outright as part of the drive. State-run bars and restaurants must set up separate smoking areas, although few have done so yet.

Private restaurants known as "paladars," fed up with fines by roving inspectors, were quick to clamp down on patrons.

At Havana's landmark Nacional Hotel, ashtrays have been removed from the lobby and guests are being told to visit the veranda if they want to enjoy a cigar with their mojito cocktail.

Smoking at the city's international airport is a thing of the past, though the national carrier Cubana will continue to let passengers smoke on some of its flights, the airline said.

At the How Yueng restaurant in central Havana, where the only Chinese dish is fried rice, no-smoking signs have been up for five years, but that did not deter customers from smoking.

"We turned a blind eye. Now we will be stricter," said waitress Yaily.

A freshly painted "Do Not Smoke" sign was stuck to the mirror of Gerardo's barber shop in Old Havana, and patrons were stepping out for a quick smoke.

"People smoked in here before, despite my complaints," said Gerardo, cropping a customer's hair. "Now they will have to go outside. Its clear now. It's the law," he said.

"It's all right," said Jorge, a pack-a-day truck driver, as he waited for his turn out on the sidewalk, puffing on a powerful Popular, Cuba's non-filtered dark tobacco cigarette. "There is air conditioning inside and that bothers people who do not smoke."

HABIT HARD TO KICK

The smoking decree published a month ago also banned the sale of cigarettes to minors and at any kiosk within 109 yards of schools.

At the Calixto Garcia Hospital in Havana, however, Cubans were puffing as usual in the cafe where cigarettes were still on sale.

More than half of Cuban adults smoke and lung cancer is a major cause of death in the island nation of 11 million.



Many Cubans are skeptical that the new regulations will stick in a country where smoking is so ingrained that the Communist state still hands out subsidized cigarettes with ration books to Cubans over the age of 50.

The Western world's five-century-long addiction to nicotine began in Cuba, where Christopher Columbus came across the tobacco leaf on his first voyage to the Americas in 1492. Crew members met natives smoking aromatic leaves in small lighted bundles.

While cigar manufacturers fled Cuba when it moved to communist rule under Castro, the island is still renowned for some of the finest smokes in the world.

Younger Cubans, who generally smoke less than previous generations, welcomed the smoking curbs.

"I am all for it. I don't smoke and I don't see why other people's smoke should harm my health," said Saidinys Barrera, an art history student.
 
Truly strange times we're living in. I've heard that he is gung-ho about the U.N.'s health initiative and wanted to make an example for his people to follow. For news about Cuba, checkout Cubanet. It also has some interesting news from time to time cigar wise. There is a torcedor who just finished crafting a 36 inch long figurado and hopes that it will be in the Guinness book of world records soon, as the longest hand-rolled cigar. Imagine how long that baby would take to smoke!.
 
Codresu is a real scream.

NA



CASTRO BANS SMOKING IN PUBLIC BUILDINGS IN CUBA: A EULOGY
By Andrei Codrescu


A few years ago Air Cubana was the world's last smoking airline. Before boarding, a Texas evangelist smuggling Bibles to Havana, warned me not to worry when I saw white smoke fill the plane after take-off: “It's the Rusian air-conditioning!” As soon as we were airborne, white smoke filled the cabin. The German guy next to me freaked out. “It's the Russian air-conditioning!” I cooly told him. “Ach,” he sighed with relief and - lit a cigarette. On cue, everyone on the plane lit up. When the plane was good and full of both white and grey smoke, the Air Cubana stewardessses showed up with cigar boxes. Everyone started buying Romeo y Julietas and Cohibas and lit up as soon as they finished their cigarettes. By the time we landed, I was weeping and I tumbled gratefully into the tropical heat breathing in the diesel fumes of Havana like they were pure oxygen. Which compared to the Air Cubana cabin they sure were.
In Cuba I met Orlando “El Duque” Hernandez, the great pitcher, who cried real tears about his banishment from baseball by Fidel Castro - and chained-smoked Marlboros as he told his tale. After he escaped from Cuba I saw Orlando again in Ohio before the Yankees signed him up, and he told me that he'd been stranded for days on a deserted island after the escape and he'd refused to smoke Cuban cigarettes until he was rescued and could have a Marlboro. Saying that was like slapping Fidel Castro personally. Look out, Cohiba man, I'm the Marlboro man now.
Cigarettes were huge during the Cold War when just lighting up an American cigarette in Eastern Europe was like aiming a gun at the system. In Romania Kent cigarettes became currency. I asked somebody why Kents and he said, “They can't be faked over here.” Most people didn't even smoke them, they just traded them with the seals unbroken for things like shoes and oranges.
When anti-smoking bans took effect in the U.S., the Marlboro Man could still ask for asylum in Cuba. It's all over now. The revolution didn't die when Che Guevara cut his hair or when Castro traded his fatigues in for a suit, but it sure is dead now. What's a revolution without smoke?
 
Top