Cuba restricts citizens' web access.

AuthorSwartz, Nikki
PositionUp front: news, trends & analysis

In Cuba, citizens can send and receive e-mail and surf a Cuban intranet, but they are barred from accessing the World Wide Web.

President Fidel Castro's government says restricting access to the Internet is necessary in poor developing countries where the telecommunications infrastructure is insufficient. Communications Minister Ignacio Gonzalez told the media that Cuba lacks the bandwidth to allow unrestricted access to the internet and blamed trade sanctions imposed on his country by the United States. But critics maintain that Cuba has repressed Internet access to stop the free flow of information and stifle dissent in the communist-run nation. The state strictly controls all Web servers and recently announced plans to crack down on illegal Internet access.

E-mail access is allowed, but it comes at a price. The Cuban Postal Service offers e-mail accounts with a three-hour prepaid card for $4.50--one-third of the average Cuban workers' monthly wage. That price allows Cubans to e-mail friends and family abroad, but there is often a two-hour or more wait to get into one of the computer rooms. At the cyber cafe in Havana's International Business Center, patrons must show identification and sign a contract just to open an e-mail account.

Despite the restrictions, connectivity has grown quickly in Cuba, a nation of 11 million. There are 270,000 computers in the country, 65 percent of which are connected to Cuba's Web, according to the government. Cuban domain names, which end in .cu, have multiplied...

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