Web of Resistance Rises in Cuba
By Scott Wilson
Washington Post Foreign Service
HAVANA -- A nerdy new rebel has emerged in Cuba: the Internet guerrilla.
His laptop case has replaced the beret as the signature of revolution
among thousands of mostly young male professionals, who through subversive
cunning have
become nearly as wired as anyone in the world despite Cuban law prohibiting
unauthorized private Internet use.
Known among themselves as informaticos, they represent resistance to
a government that has sought to stifle the flow of information since the
revolution four
decades ago. Encouraged by tentative government steps to wire the country,
the growing number of Cubans who ignore official prohibitions to look at
foreign news
pages, listen to pirate music sites and browse computer training courses
online are speeding along Cuba's plodding journey into the information
age.
"I'm a member of the generation born just after the revolution," said
a 31-year-old engineer, who like other illegal Internet users agreed to
speak only on condition of
anonymity. "We all saw the giant Soviet mainframe computers linked
together that did so little. The PC and Internet are new, independent ways
of thinking. To us,
Bill Gates and Linus Torvalds are gurus."
After watching the flow of information help fuel the Soviet Union's
disintegration, Cuba's Communist government has clamped down on Internet
technology even as
the number of users throughout the rest of Latin America has doubled
each year. Controlling what Cubans read and hear has been part of President
Fidel Castro's
rule from the beginning. In theory, Cubans have access only to state-run
newspapers and government television and radio, but many listen regularly
to foreign news
broadcasts.
That the Internet poses a serious threat to the information monopoly
has not eluded the leadership; Cuba has one of the lowest per capita rates
of computer and
telephone ownership in the hemisphere. Only a select few Cubans, mostly
those with access to U.S. dollars, can afford a computer, even with deep
discounts that
come with government approval. Buying them on the black market is illegal.
But, according to dissidents and computer enthusiasts, thousands of young
Cubans do
so, and the practice is well known.
Internet connections are prohibited without government permission. Only
about 40,000 officials, businesses and foreigners in a country of 11 million
people have
been authorized to link up, the government estimates. But thousands
more have found a way to plug into the official links without permission.
The government is just beginning to test the waters of the information
age after years of blaming the U.S. trade embargo for depriving Cuba of
the resources to
prepare for it. Cuba plans to open a dozen cyber-cafes around Havana
next year with foreign investment and to spend $100 million annually to
bring in digital phone
lines, wireless technology and other advances that could expand Internet
availability.
Across the Spanish colonial-era capital, signs of a dot-com world are
sprouting. Computer courses offered at youth clubs are jammed with students
ranging in age
from 4 to 40. A new breed of Internet entrepreneur has arrived, helping
the government create Web pages mostly designed to lure tourists to the
island. Streets are
being torn up to install digital phone lines and cable.
"Without the U.S. blockade, we'd already have the resources to put the
Internet in homes, offices, everywhere," said Francisco Miranda, who runs
a rubber factory
and receives government-approved discounts on computer equipment that
bring prices down 75 percent.
Whether a liberalization of government Internet policy will accompany
the new investment remains to be seen. Cuban dissidents say they believe
the prohibition on
home Internet connections will remain and that any Internet access
in public places will be monitored by the government and cost too much
for most Cubans.
"Castro wants to keep Cuba like a medieval fortress surrounded by a
moat," said Elizardo Sanchez, a leading dissident. "For us, we would be
jailed for using it,
although I don't know if anyone has been so far. We have to have friends
in the government who will allow us to use theirs to get any access at
all."
Others essentially steal it, using authorized passwords assigned to the businesses where they work to log on to the Internet at home.
Behind the tin door of a crumbling building on the edge of Old Havana,
a bare light bulb illuminates two chairs, a rusting refrigerator and a
globe next to a partition of
glass and wood. The partition hides a computer, cobbled together with
parts bought on the thriving black market. There is no brand name on the
casing and no top to
hide the workings inside. It looms there like a stolen car in a suburban
garage.
A high-pitched whistle and crackle rise above the street noise, a Yahoo
Spanish-language home page pops onto the screen. With slicked-back hair
and faded
khakis, the computer's 26-year-old owner types the Web address for
CNN en espanol, scans the headlines, then enters a site called dialpad.com
where he places a
free call to his sister in the United States.
"There is a very big group of us here who are huge enthusiasts," he said. "In a way, we are a kind of underground."
While limiting private Internet use, the Cuban government has embraced
the financial possibilities of e-commerce. Stephen Marshall, a British
citizen with a ponytail
and seafront office at the Hemingway Marina here, has created 60 Web
sites in partnership with the Cuban government since arriving five years
ago. He said he will
have 168 sites within three months, many of them linked to his travel
agency.
At 32, Marshall is making enough money to decorate his office with the
striking antique furniture of Havana's pre-revolutionary mayors, and he
recently donated $1
million in medicine to Pinar del Rio province. He is also investing
$2.5 million in seven cyber-cafes in partnership with the government.
"Here the cyber-cafes will be the Internet," Marshall said. "You open
up a whole can of worms when one guy on the street can buy a PC and go
online and the next
guy can't. So this allows everyone access."
The government's first two cyber-cafes, which opened this year, are
not as accessible as Marshall envisions. The first opened in Havana's graceful
pre-revolution
capitol building last summer. But with Internet use costing $5 per
hour -- about half the average Cuban monthly salary -- the cafe is still
used mainly by tourists and
select Cubans who are paid in U.S. currency.
In October, the government opened a second cyber-cafe in the centuries-old
Palacio del Segundo Cabo on Old Havana's Plaza de Armas. The monthly membership
fee is 50 cents, but only members of the government-sanctioned writers
union and a young artists group are permitted to use the six terminals.
The cafe's computers
were filled on a recent weekday, with a line forming along the coffee
bar. But even these computers are filtered to allow access only to selected
cultural Web sites.
"Generally, there is no place for us except in offices, stores and universities,"
said Evelio Perez Paula, 32, a member of a young artists association who
is making
compact disc anthologies of Cuban art to sell. "This has started pretty
slowly. But I think it could become a popular spot."
A few blocks away in central Havana, a framed note hangs on the wall
of a youth center for computer training. "I'm envious," it reads in sprawling
marker, signed by
Castro at the center's inauguration in 1991. On the far wall a slogan
reads: "We believe in the future."
Upstairs, the classrooms are filled with students, some too young to
read but learning how to use a mouse. They fill their screens with drawings
of people on a
summer picnic. In the next room, older students learn HTML, the programming
language of the Internet. But the future has been slow in coming; although
the
government plans to bring Internet access to more than a 100 youth
clubs, the work is probably a year from completion.
The wait has been unacceptable to many young Cubans, including some
being trained in the prestigious Instituto Superior Politecnico Jose Antonio
Echeverria. The
university, Cuba's equivalent of MIT, occupies a complex of peeling
concrete buildings near the airport adorned with Communist murals. Among
its graduates are
members of Castro's inner circle, and it is the chief recruiting location
for arriving dot-com executives who just a few years ago looked to the
Bahamas and the British
Virgin Islands for qualified high-tech workers.
A nerd chic has emerged, meanwhile, among Havana's computer-savvy youths.
On a recent night, the 26-year-old Internet pirate and his 30-year-old
friend headed
out into Havana's bustling streets to catch a movie during a recent
film festival. Both had laptop cases slung over their shoulders, although
only one actually had a
laptop.
"On weekends, we have LAN [local area network] parties," said the 30-year-old,
where 20 or so friends link laptops for chats and mutual Web surfing. "I
can show
you places on the Internet where you can find the Microsoft code,"
he bragged.
The 26-year-old uses the Internet password from his workplace to log
on, which he compares to borrowing a neighbor's phone. A computer student
in the youth
clubs a few years ago, the 26-year-old said he knows 32 Internet sites
where he can make free calls to the United States at a time the government
is blocking
incoming U.S. calls.
"To me, none of this is a crime," he said. "If I were distributing anti-government
propaganda on the Web, that would be. I look at this as if I didn't have
a phone and
was borrowing my neighbor's to make a call.
"We're not much different than computer people anywhere else in the
world," he continued. "But here we just have to be more creative because
we have so few
resources available. And we have to be careful because this is Cuba."