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On
October 27,1492 Admiral Christopher Columbus commanding
three carabelas; La Niña, La Pinta y La Santa
maria, landed at the eastern Bay of Bariay. By the
end of 1510 the conquering expedition led by Diego
Velazquez arrived and founded, in that very year,
the villa of "Nuestra Señora de la Asuncion"in
Baracoa.
The towns of San Salvador de Bayamo, Puerto Principe
y Santiago de Cuba were founded in 1514. On the way
towards the west of the archipelago new towns were
established; La Santisima Trinidad, Sancti Spiritus
and San Cristobal de La Habana, which was first built
south of the current location and moved North in 1519,
next to the Bay of Carenas (later called Bay of La
Habana). Search and extraction of gold and other valuable
minerals began from the early years of the conquest.
Hard labour and diseases exhausted the indigenous
population almost to extinction. Lines like tobacco
and cattle raising boomed and due to the incorporation
of sugar (16th Century) and coffee (on 1748) the slave
trade began. The island's soil, virgin and fertile,
granted a quick production growth to the Spaniards.
In August 1762
La Habana was seized by British troops who controlled
the city for 11 months. This increased the freedom
of commerce and doubled the amount of slaves in the
western region. By the end of the 16th century Cuba
became the leading producer of sugar cane in the world.
In 1868 at the "La Demajagua" sugar mill,
Carlos Manuel de Cespedes set his slaves free and
summoned them to rise in arms against colonizers.
From that day on the country suffered the "Ten
Year War", which ended by the "Pacto del
Zanjon". Jose Marti founded the Cuban Revolutionary
Party in 1892. War recommenced on February 24, 1895.
The Mambi Army marched in victory from one end of
the island to the other, defeating a Spanish Army
of more than 200 000 men. As a National Hero and martyr
of the struggles for independence, Jose Marti fell
in combat at Dos Rios on May 19, 1895. Lt. General
of the mambi army, Antonio Maceo then carried out
the invasion from East to West. Using the explosion
of the frigate "Maine" off the coast of
Havana as a basic excuse, the United States declared
war on Spain in 1898 defeating a weakened army shortly
after.
The Republic
was established on May 20, 1902 but the intermeddling
Platt Amendment soon restrained it. Julio Antonio
Mella, leader of the university students, founded
the Communist Party of Cuba in 1925. "Revolution
of the 30's" was the name given by the people
to the struggle against Machado's dictatorship. The
assault on the Moncada garrison was carried out on
July 26th, 1953 in Santiago de Cuba by a group of
young men led by Fidel Castro. Despite its failure,
this action motivated the National liberation movement.
On December 2nd, 1956, 82 expeditionary men arrived
from Mexico aboard the Granma yacht and landed at
the southeast area of the country. At the head of
this expedition was Fidel Castro, other members were
Ernesto Che Guevara, Camilo Cienfuegos and Fidel's
brother, Raul Castro. They went on towards the Sierra
Maestra Mountains creating along the way the Rebel
Army.
During the years of 1956, '57 and '58 innumerable
revolutionary blows in different regions and cities
of the island began to weaken Batista's army.
On January 1st
1959, President Fulgencio Batista flew to Santo Domingo
with his family abandoning Cuba, with him were 40
million dollars stolen from the public treasury prior
to his departure. The Rebel Army troops commanded
by Fidel Castro arrived victoriously in Havana on
January 8th, 1959. The First Law of Agrarian Reform
was promulgated on May 17th, 1959 returning land to
the farmers. On October 28th, Commander Camilo Cienfuegos
plane disappeared during flight from Camaguey to La
Habana. The first Soviet ship loaded with oil arrived
in April 1960 to Havana's harbour. Begging on July
5th, the United States imposed the current economical
and commercial embargo on the island. At a public
meeting on April 16th, 1961 the Commander in Chief
Fidel Castro proclaimed the Socialist nature of the
Cuban revolution. National Campaigns against Illiteracy
were successfully carried out during 1961. Mercenary
troops trained by the United States landed at the
Bay of Pigs on April 17th, 1961 with the purpose of
overthrowing the ruling Revolution. Three days later
the invasion was overthrown.
Cuba was expelled
from the OAS in 1962. The so-called October Crisis
happened in October 1962 as a consequence of the Soviet
nuclear weapons on the island, this has been touted
as the closest that humanity has come to a nuclear
war. Commander Ernesto Che Guevara was murdered by
CIA agents at Valle Grande, Bolivia in 1967. In 1972
Cuba was accepted as a member of the economic community
of the Socialist countries, known as CAME, which enabled
development and trade. In a disordered manner, thousands
of Cubans seeking political asylum entered the Embassy
of Peru in Havana in 1980. Fidel Castro's government
opened the Port of Mariel, in northwest Havana, for
all those who wanted to migrate legally towards the
United States. In 1982 UNESCO declared Old Havana
as a site Patrimony of Humanity.
Between 1975
and 1984 almost half a million Cuban combatants took
part in the war of Angola fulfilling an agreement
signed by both countries. Cuban troops retreated in
1984. The UN Human Rights Commission presented on
1987 a resolution condemning Cuba for violating human
rights. The disaster of the Socialist countries of
Eastern Europe influenced the island's economy, creating
an economic crisis. The UN approved a resolution that
condemned the economic embargo by the United States
against Cuba in 1992. Decree-law 140 issued by the
State's Council in 1993 authorized the use of the
USD throughout Cuba. In August 1994 a mass exodus
began by "boat-people" on rafts: thousands
of people left the island aboard homemade rafts encouraged
by the United States immigration policy and guaranteed
asylum to any Cuban Citizen arriving in US territorial
waters. In that same year, Cuba was not allowed to
attend the Caribbean Summit held in Miami.
In 1995 small private businesses
were allowed in sectors such as Private restaurants,
Taxis, etc. The European Community approved on that
year a 19,5 million dollars program to finance public
health. President William Clinton undersigned in 1996
the Helms-Burton Law, which effectively strengthened
the blockade against Cuba, essentially meddling in
the country's internal and external affairs. Months
later the Cuban Parliament issued the Law 80 declaring
"illegal" the Helms-Burton Law and defending
the rights of Cuban people to choose their own destiny.
In January 1998, Pope John Paul was officially invited
to visit the island for five days he was met by the
highest representatives of the government and heads
of Churches. The Elian Gonzalez kidnap case by Miami
relatives is the latest move designed to undermine
the Cuban people.
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