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Presentation
General Info
 
Welcome to Cuba!
Cuba, an island located in the Caribbean Sea, has a total surface of 110 992 Km2
and a population of 12 millions inhabitants. Our climate is featured by a summer
and a mild-winter seasons. Our country is divided into 14 provinces and a
special municipality- an island southwest of Cuba.
Cuba
has no plants or animals that are lethal to humans (yes, this includes poisonous
snakes!) The mountain ranges include the Sierra Maestra to the East, the
Cordillera de los Organos to the West, and the Sierra del Escambray in the
central region.
The elongated island of Cuba is the largest
island in the Caribbean and is bounded to the north by the Straits of Florida
and the greater North Atlantic Ocean, to the northwest by the Gulf of Mexico, to
the west by the Yucatan Channel, to the south by the Caribbean Sea, and to the
east by the Windward Passage. The Republic comprises the entire island,
including many outlying islands such as the Isle of Youth, previously known as
the Isle of Pine, with the exception of Guantanamo Bay, a naval base that has
been leased by the United States since 1903. The mainland is the world's 16th
largest island.
The economy of Cuba is based on state ownership
with some small scale private enterprise existing at the fringes. Tourism has
become one of the largest sources of income for Cuba, and in 1993 the U.S.
dollar was made legal tender (the country operated under a dual-currency
system); this arrangement was, however, revoked on 25 October 2004.
The Cuban economy was hit hard in the early
1990s following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Comecon economic bloc,
with which it had traded predominantly. More recent problems include high oil
prices, recessions in key export markets such as sugar and nickel, damage from
hurricanes (most recently an estimated 1 billion dollars economic damage from
hurricane Charley), depressed tourism, and faltering world economic conditions.
In late 2003, and early 2004, both tourism levels and nickel prices increased.
One other factor in the recovery of the Cuban economy is the remittances of
Cuban-Americans (which constitute almost 3% of the Cuban Economy, by some
estimates). Cuba currently trades with almost every nation in the world
(including the U.S.). However, Cuba owes billions in Paris Club debt to nations
such as France, Japan and Germany.
Havana, the capital city of Cuba, has a population of 3 millions inhabitants. It
limits to the north with the Caribbean Sea, to the south with the Habana
province, to the east with the Matanzas province and to the west with the Pinar
del Rio province. It has 15 municipalities of which Old Havana is the most
important, for being a World Heritage. This year Havana celebrates its 486
Anniversary of foundation.Havana city has a 22-km beach coast, called Playas del
Este, characterized by its fine sand and the existence of an important tourism
and hotel chain. The three most important hotels of the beach coast are:
Tropicoco, Itabo and Las Terrazas. The sand of the beaches of this area has a 40
cm depth and its grains are quite conic; a typical feature of Cuba. The playing
area, located in the Megano Beach, has a 5 km of sand extension. This beach if
500 m from the Venue Hotel: Las Terrazas. Temperatures in this season of the
year range from 20ºC to 25ºC and the relative humidity oscillates between 85 to
90%. The most emblematic hotels of the capital city are: the Hotel Nacional,
Habana Libre Trip, Riviera Hotel, Plaza Hotel, Triton Hotel, Melia Cohiba and
Inglaterra Hotels.



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