The Hill Washington DC 7 June 2021

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Hill Washington DC 7 June 2021 U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, Inc. New York, New York Telephone (917) 453-6726 • E-mail: [email protected] Internet: http://www.cubatrade.org • Twitter: @CubaCouncil Facebook: www.facebook.com/uscubatradeandeconomiccouncil LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/u-s--cuba-trade-and-economic-council-inc- The Hill Washington DC 7 June 2021 Biden shifts from Obama on Cuba post-Florida losses By Max Greenwood and Celine Castronuovo President Biden has taken a U-turn from the Obama administration’s policies on Cuba after Democrats lost two consecutive presidential elections in Florida. While Biden ended or reversed a number of Trump-era policies upon taking office, including the U.S. exit from the Paris climate deal and the so-called Muslim travel ban, former President Obama's former vice president has kept in place Trump-era restrictions on Cuba following Obama's openings to the island nation. The administration has said it's reviewing the country’s policy on Cuba and hasn’t publicly ruled out changes. But the retention of Trump's policies so far also follows deeply disappointing results for Democrats among Latino voters in Florida, where Cuban Americans are a vital voting bloc. “You have to think that the reason that nothing has been done is because of some consideration about how Cuban Americans are going to take a shift in policy,” said Guillermo Grenier, a professor at Florida International University and one of the lead investigators of the school’s Cuba Poll. Democrats’ troubles in Florida were put into stark relief in November when Trump carried the state for a second time, helped out by big gains in the Miami area, a traditional Democratic stronghold where roughly 7 in 10 residents are Latino. In 2016, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton won Miami-Dade County by nearly 30 percentage points, while Biden carried it last year by less than 8 points. Trump’s better-than-expected performance in Miami-Dade came down to several factors. For one, he campaigned there for years and embraced Spanish-language outreach efforts. At the same time, Spanish- speaking voters in South Florida found themselves targeted by disinformation campaigns in the lead-up to the 2020 election. Democrats acknowledge that part of Trump’s success in the Miami area owed to his campaign’s efforts to label Democrats as “socialists” — a particularly painful word for many of Florida’s Latino residents who fled leftist governments in countries such as Cuba and Venezuela. “You have to ask yourself: what do we get for going back to the pre-Trump approach to Cuba?” one Florida Democratic strategist said. “The answer is nothing. The Cuba issue doesn’t play anywhere in the country but Florida, and here I think it’s a liability to say ‘let’s normalize relations with Cuba.’ ” “It’s not going to win you any votes, but it will lose you votes,” the strategist added. “I think this is kind of an admission of that.” Biden vowed on the campaign trail to reverse the Trump administration’s policies on Cuba, arguing that the former president’s hard-line stance had “done nothing to advance democracy and human rights” and had instead made the situation on the island worse. But since taking office in January, neither Biden nor his administration has signaled a willingness to return to the Obama-era policies of detente. At a briefing in March, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that “a Cuba policy shift is not currently among President Biden’s top priorities.” In perhaps the clearest sign to date that Biden has no immediate plans to reverse his predecessor’s Cuba policy, the State Department renewed a determination made under the Trump administration that Cuba is “not cooperating fully with United States antiterrorism efforts.” The State Department said its decision was made after “a review of a country's overall level of cooperation in our efforts to fight terrorism, taking into account our counterterrorism objectives with that country, and a realistic assessment of its capabilities.” Nelson Diaz, the chair of the Miami-Dade Republican Party, said that any effort by the Biden administration to reverse Trump’s policies on Cuba would “prove to us that they are communist sympathizers or socialists.” By sticking to the line set by the Trump administration, Diaz said, Biden may be able ease the concerns of at least some Cuban Americans. “It might assuage some Cuban Democrats into voting for them. It might assuage some of those concerns,” he said. “A lot of Cuban Democrats voted Republican last cycle. If the Biden administration were to take a hard line like the Trump administration did, some of those Cuban Democrats that voted Republican could potentially swing back.” But, he added: “I don’t see them getting back much of the vote they lost. That’s a tall order.” Whether Biden and his party can shake their recent disappointments in Florida will be tested next year when Democrats seek to defeat Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) in the 2022 midterms. Democrats are also targeting two Miami-area House districts represented by Cuban American Republicans, who just flipped control of their seats from Democrats last year. Biden’s reluctance to reverse course on Trump-era policies on Cuba has also put him at odds with members of his own party. Earlier this year, a group of 75 Democratic lawmakers penned a letter to the president urging him to return to “the Obama-Biden Administration policy of engagement and normalization of relations.” Notably, none of the 10 Democratic members of Florida’s House delegation signed the letter. John Kavulich, the president of the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, said it shouldn’t come as a surprise that Biden is not racing to continue Obama’s work on U.S.-Cuba relations. “Joe Biden is not Barack Obama,” he said, adding: “You look at Joseph Biden's career in the Senate, particularly, and you don't see a lot of foundation to support that he wants to return everything that Donald Trump did.” Kavulich said there is nothing remarkable about the fact that Biden is weighing political considerations in his approach to Cuba, arguing that other presidents have done the same thing. Obama, he noted, largely waited until his last term in the White House to aggressively pursue detente with Havana. “Why is it shocking and considered undesirable if politics play a role in the decision of an elected politician?” Kavulich said. “It's astounding to me that there can be criticism of the Biden administration for evaluating the domestic political context of something that it's going to do relating to foreign policy.” Tampa Bay Times St. Petersburg, Florida 7 June 2021 Newman Cigar Company wants to bring Cuban tobacco back to Ybor City It could be done via a program that allows Americans to import goods produced by Cuba’s private sector. Eric Newman, president of J.C. Newman Cigar Company, with a bail of Cuban tobacco that was purchased before the embargo. [ [ CHRIS URSO | Times (2014)] ] By Paul Guzzo TAMPA — The J.C. Newman Cigar Company claims to have the nation’s last bale of Cuban tobacco. Purchased just prior to the U.S. government cutting off all business relations with the socialist nation, the Newman family now stores it in their Ybor City factory basement. They use it as part of a history tour detailing Tampa’s time as cigar rolling capitol of the world, which was made possible due to the city’s close relationship with Cuba’s tobacco farmers. The Newmans now hope to import the first bales of Cuban tobacco since the embargo was enacted six decades ago. They have petitioned the U.S. State Department for permission to do so via an Obama-era program that allows American businesses to import goods and services produced by Cuban entrepreneurs who operate independently of Cuba’s state-run economy. Cuban cigars are banned in the U.S. because they are only rolled through a partnership between Cuba’s state-run Habanos S.A. and London-based Imperial Tobacco. “There are independent farmers growing tobacco in Cuba, including some independent tobacco farming co-ops,” said Drew Newman, general counsel for J.C. Newman, which is Tampa’s last cigar factory. “Before President Kennedy imposed the Cuban Embargo, my grandfather and great-grandfather imported millions of pounds of Cuban tobacco into the United States through the Port of Tampa.” To start, they would like to import 10,000 pounds of Cuban tobacco, enough to handroll 150,000 to 175,000 cigars. “We’ll take as much as we can get or as little as we can get,” Newman said. “I’m sure it will start off slowly as the U.S. government gives us permission, but then we can grow it over time.” Since Obama started the program to support Cuba’s private sector, the U.S. government has approved the import of coffee and charcoal. John Kavulich is the president of the New York-based U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council, which analyzes and predicts business trends between the nations. He said this is the right time for the Newmans to petition for the import. The Biden administration, he said, is considering allowing Americans to invest in Cuba’s private sector. Currently, U.S. citizens can only donate to the businesses. “This impacts the Newmans in a good way,” Kavulich said. “The Biden administration has interest in providing more support to Cuba’s private sector.” Still, Kavulich said, the Cuban government must allow its private farms to sell tobacco to the Newmans.
Recommended publications
  • Radio and Television Correspondents' Galleries
    RADIO AND TELEVISION CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES* SENATE RADIO AND TELEVISION GALLERY The Capitol, Room S–325, 224–6421 Director.—Michael Mastrian Deputy Director.—Jane Ruyle Senior Media Coordinator.—Michael Lawrence Media Coordinator.—Sara Robertson HOUSE RADIO AND TELEVISION GALLERY The Capitol, Room H–321, 225–5214 Director.—Tina Tate Deputy Director.—Olga Ramirez Kornacki Assistant for Administrative Operations.—Gail Davis Assistant for Technical Operations.—Andy Elias Assistants: Gerald Rupert, Kimberly Oates EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE RADIO AND TELEVISION CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES Joe Johns, NBC News, Chair Jerry Bodlander, Associated Press Radio Bob Fuss, CBS News Edward O’Keefe, ABC News Dave McConnell, WTOP Radio Richard Tillery, The Washington Bureau David Wellna, NPR News RULES GOVERNING RADIO AND TELEVISION CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the Radio and Television Galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by Rule 34 of the House of Representatives, as amended, and to the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate, as required by Rule 33, as amended, for the regulation of Senate wing of the Capitol. Applicants shall state in writing the names of all radio stations, television stations, systems, or news-gathering organizations by which they are employed and what other occupation or employment they may have, if any. Applicants shall further declare that they are not engaged in the prosecution of claims or the promotion of legislation pending before Congress, the Departments, or the independent agencies, and that they will not become so employed without resigning from the galleries. They shall further declare that they are not employed in any legislative or executive department or independent agency of the Government, or by any foreign government or representative thereof; that they are not engaged in any lobbying activities; that they *Information is based on data furnished and edited by each respective gallery.
    [Show full text]
  • Inside Russia's Intelligence Agencies
    EUROPEAN COUNCIL ON FOREIGN BRIEF POLICY RELATIONS ecfr.eu PUTIN’S HYDRA: INSIDE RUSSIA’S INTELLIGENCE SERVICES Mark Galeotti For his birthday in 2014, Russian President Vladimir Putin was treated to an exhibition of faux Greek friezes showing SUMMARY him in the guise of Hercules. In one, he was slaying the • Russia’s intelligence agencies are engaged in an “hydra of sanctions”.1 active and aggressive campaign in support of the Kremlin’s wider geopolitical agenda. The image of the hydra – a voracious and vicious multi- headed beast, guided by a single mind, and which grows • As well as espionage, Moscow’s “special services” new heads as soon as one is lopped off – crops up frequently conduct active measures aimed at subverting in discussions of Russia’s intelligence and security services. and destabilising European governments, Murdered dissident Alexander Litvinenko and his co-author operations in support of Russian economic Yuri Felshtinsky wrote of the way “the old KGB, like some interests, and attacks on political enemies. multi-headed hydra, split into four new structures” after 1991.2 More recently, a British counterintelligence officer • Moscow has developed an array of overlapping described Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) as and competitive security and spy services. The a hydra because of the way that, for every plot foiled or aim is to encourage risk-taking and multiple operative expelled, more quickly appear. sources, but it also leads to turf wars and a tendency to play to Kremlin prejudices. The West finds itself in a new “hot peace” in which many consider Russia not just as an irritant or challenge, but • While much useful intelligence is collected, as an outright threat.
    [Show full text]
  • The European Union in the Fog
    THE EUROPEAN UNION IN THE FOG Building Bridges between National Perspectives on the European Union Edited by Vivien Pertusot Final Report of the project “Building Bridges Between National Perspectives on the European Union” About Building Bridges Called “Building Bridges Between National Perspectives on the European Union”, the project aims to stimulate the public debate around national experts on the relationship between their Member State and the EU and on the future of the Union. This project confronts their visions with others’ from different member states, but also those of people from different horizons via workshops in Warsaw, Madrid, Paris and Brussels, which took place in 2015 gathering experts and local citizens. The project is coordinated by the French Institute of International Relations (Ifri) with three major partners: the Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM), Real Instituto Elcano and EUROPEUM—European Institute for European Policy. The project has also benefited from the support of institutes in each Member State. You can find all the information and publications about the project at this address: http://www.ifri.org/en/recherche/zones-geographiques/europe/projet-building-bridges. March 2016. ISBN 978-2-36567-542-0. The opinions expressed in this report are the responsibility of the authors alone. Project coordinated by: Major partners: This project is supported by the Europe for Citizens programme of the European Union. The European Commission support for the production of this publication does not constitute an endorsement of the contents which reflects the views only of the authors, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.
    [Show full text]
  • Participant List
    Participant List 10/20/2019 8:45:44 AM Category First Name Last Name Position Organization Nationality CSO Jillian Abballe UN Advocacy Officer and Anglican Communion United States Head of Office Ramil Abbasov Chariman of the Managing Spektr Socio-Economic Azerbaijan Board Researches and Development Public Union Babak Abbaszadeh President and Chief Toronto Centre for Global Canada Executive Officer Leadership in Financial Supervision Amr Abdallah Director, Gulf Programs Educaiton for Employment - United States EFE HAGAR ABDELRAHM African affairs & SDGs Unit Maat for Peace, Development Egypt AN Manager and Human Rights Abukar Abdi CEO Juba Foundation Kenya Nabil Abdo MENA Senior Policy Oxfam International Lebanon Advisor Mala Abdulaziz Executive director Swift Relief Foundation Nigeria Maryati Abdullah Director/National Publish What You Pay Indonesia Coordinator Indonesia Yussuf Abdullahi Regional Team Lead Pact Kenya Abdulahi Abdulraheem Executive Director Initiative for Sound Education Nigeria Relationship & Health Muttaqa Abdulra'uf Research Fellow International Trade Union Nigeria Confederation (ITUC) Kehinde Abdulsalam Interfaith Minister Strength in Diversity Nigeria Development Centre, Nigeria Kassim Abdulsalam Zonal Coordinator/Field Strength in Diversity Nigeria Executive Development Centre, Nigeria and Farmers Advocacy and Support Initiative in Nig Shahlo Abdunabizoda Director Jahon Tajikistan Shontaye Abegaz Executive Director International Insitute for Human United States Security Subhashini Abeysinghe Research Director Verite
    [Show full text]
  • National Endowment for the Arts Annual Report 1989
    National Endowment for the Arts Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. President: I have the honor to submit to you the Annual Report of the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Council on the Arts for the Fiscal Year ended September 30, 1989. Respectfully, John E. Frohnmayer Chairman The President The White House Washington, D.C. July 1990 Contents CHAIRMAN’S STATEMENT ............................iv THE AGENCY AND ITS FUNCTIONS ..............xxvii THE NATIONAL COUNCIL ON THE ARTS .......xxviii PROGRAMS ............................................... 1 Dance ........................................................2 Design Arts ................................................20 . Expansion Arts .............................................30 . Folk Arts ....................................................48 Inter-Arts ...................................................58 Literature ...................................................74 Media Arts: Film/Radio/Television ......................86 .... Museum.................................................... 100 Music ......................................................124 Opera-Musical Theater .....................................160 Theater ..................................................... 172 Visual Arts .................................................186 OFFICE FOR PUBLIC PARTNERSHIP ...............203 . Arts in Education ..........................................204 Local Programs ............................................212 States Program .............................................216
    [Show full text]
  • JGI V.14, N.1
    Journal of Global Initiatives: Policy, Pedagogy, Perspective Volume 15 Number 1 Article 1 11-16-2020 Full Issue - JGI v.14, n.1 Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/jgi Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. Recommended Citation (2020) "Full Issue - JGI v.14, n.1," Journal of Global Initiatives: Policy, Pedagogy, Perspective: Vol. 15 : No. 1 , Article 1. Available at: https://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/jgi/vol15/iss1/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@Kennesaw State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Global Initiatives: Policy, Pedagogy, Perspective by an authorized editor of DigitalCommons@Kennesaw State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Year of Cuba JOURNAL of GLOBAL INITIATIVES POLICY, PEDAGOGY, PERSPECTIVE 2020 VOLUME 15 NUMBER 1 Year of Cuba Journal of Global Initiatives Volume 15, Number 1, 2020 Contents: 1 Introduction to the Year of Cuba Special Issue Dan Paracka 6 Between Subject and Object: The Identity of a Carmen Salama Slave in Juan Francisco Manzano’s Autobiography 16 Testimonies of War during Cuba’s Fight for Jorge Camacho Independence (1868-1898) 27 The Architecture of the Dead: Cemetery Dana M. Moody Symbolism in Colon Cemetery, Havana, Cuba 63 The Charismatic Revolutionary Leadership Joseph J. García Trajectories of Fidel Castro and Lázaro Cárdenas: From Guerrillas to Heads of State in the Age of US Imperialism 80 The Emergence, Persistence, and Success of the Gail Markle Cuban Social Movement Las Damas de Blanco 96 An Analysis of the Effectiveness of Cuban Neta Kanny Cyberactivism 113 About the Contributors Journal of Global Initiatives Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Poland, the Czech Republic, Russia, Mauritius, Seychelles, and in Newsrooms Across the United States
    Caught in the Middle: Central and Eastern European Journalism at a Crossroads A Report to the Center for International Media Assistance By Ellen Hume January 20, 2011 The Center for International Media Assistance (CIMA), a project of the National Endowment for Democracy, aims to strengthen the support, raise the visibility, and improve the e!ectiveness of media assistance programs by providing information, building networks, conducting research, and highlighting the indispensable role independent media play in the creation and development of sustainable democracies around the world. An im- portant aspect of CIMA’s work is to research ways to attract additional U.S. private sector interest in and support for international media development. CIMA convenes working groups, discussions, and panels on a variety of topics in the "eld of media development and assistance. The center also issues reports and recommendations based on working group discussions and other investigations. These reports aim to provide policymakers, as well as donors and practitioners, with ideas for bolstering the e!ectiveness of media assistance. Marguerite H. Sullivan Senior Director Center for International Media Assistance National Endowment for Democracy 1025 F Street, N.W., 8th Floor Washington, D.C. 20004 Phone: (202) 378-9700 Fax: (202) 378-9407 Email: [email protected] URL: http://cima.ned.org About the Author Ellen Hume Ellen Hume is currently an Annenberg Fellow in Civic Media at Central European University in Budapest where in 2010 she taught in the political science department. From 2007-2009 she was research director of the Center for Future Civic Media at the MIT Media Lab.
    [Show full text]
  • 1.Russian Information Weapons; 2.Baltic Department of Defense, Or the US Defenses (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) Against Government
    Sponsor: USEUCOM Contract No.: W56KGU-17-C-0010 Project No.: 0719S120 The views expressed in this document are those of the author Three Discussions of Russian Concepts: and do not reflect the official policy or position of MITRE, the 1.Russian Information Weapons; 2.Baltic Department of Defense, or the US Defenses (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) against government. Russian Propaganda; and 3.Russia’s Development of Non-Lethal Weapons Author: Timothy Thomas March 2020 Approved for Public Release: Distribution Unlimited. Case Numbers 20-0235; 20-0050; 20-0051; 19-3194; and 20-0145. ©2020 The MITRE Corporation. All rights reserved. McClean, VA 1 FOREWORD Russia has long been captivated by the power of information as a weapon, most notably in a historical sense using propaganda to influence and persuade audiences. With the onset of the information age, the concept’s development and application increased dramatically. The power of information-technologies when applied to weaponry increased the latter’s capabilities due to increased reconnaissance and precision applications. The power of social media was used to influence populations both at home and abroad. Both developments fit perfectly into Russia’s information warfare concept, whose two aspects are information-technical and information-psychological capabilities. Information’s universality, covertness, variety of software and hardware forms and implementation, efficiency of use when choosing a time and place of employment, and, finally, cost effectiveness make it a formidable commodity when assessed as weaponry. Russian efforts to define and use IWes are well documented. In the 1990s there were efforts to define information weapons (IWes) at the United Nations, efforts that failed.
    [Show full text]
  • Asasina Nan Tout Enpinite: Masak Ki Jwenn Benediksyon Leta an Ayiti
    Asasina nan tout Enpinite: Masak ki jwenn benediksyon Leta an Ayiti Harvard Law School International Human Rights Clinic Observatoire Haïtien des crimes contre l’humanité Ilistrasyon paj kouvèti: © David Duverseau, Nègès Mawon Konsepsyon: Tutaev Design Dwa dotè: © 2021 President and Fellows of Harvard College. Tout dwa rezève. Asasina nan tout Enpinite: Masak ki jwenn benediksyon Leta an Ayiti Harvard Law School International Human Rights Clinic Observatoire Haïtien des crimes contre l’humanité Avril 2021 Tab Matyè Remèsiman 2 Rezime Egzekitif 3 Yon Modèl Atak Kontini 3 Kad legal 4 Konklizyon yo 5 I. Kontèks Politik Atak yo 6 Konsolidasyon Pouvwa Prezidan Moïse 6 Manifestasyon kont Gouvènman an 7 Represyon kont Opozisyon an ak Vyolans kont Sosyete Sivil la 7 Wòl Gang yo jwe ki ap Ogmante ak Relasyon yo genyen ak Aktè ki nan Leta 8 II. Atak Anblematik ki Mennen Kont Sivil 9 Atak sou Lasalin, 13-14 Novanm 2018 9 • Kijan Sitiyasyon an te ye avan Atak la 9 • Atak la 10 • Repons Leta a 11 Atak sou Bèlè, 4-6 novanm 2019 11 • Kijan Sitiyasyon an te ye avan Atak la 11 • Atak la 12 • Repons Leta a 13 Atak sou Site Solèy, Me-Jiyè 2020 13 • Kijan Sitiyasyon an te ye avan Atak la 13 • Atak la 14 • Repons Leta 15 III. Analiz Jiridik: Gen Motif Rezonab pou Konkli Atak sa yo se Krim Kont Limanite 16 Krim Kont Limanite Daprè Dwa Entènasyonal 16 Atak yo Enplike Zak ki kapab kalifye kòm Vyolans 16 • Touye Moun 16 • Vyòl 17 • Matirize moun 17 • Pèsekisyon kont yon gwoup oswa yon kolektivite ki ka idantifye akoz 18 opinyon politik yo • Krim sa yo antre nan kad atak yo 18 Atak yo te Vize Dirèkteman yon Popilasyon Sivil 19 • Agresyon ki te fèt sou Lasalin, Bèle ak Site Solèy yo antre nan kad yon atak 19 • Atak yo te dirije kont yon popilasyon sivil 19 Atak yo te genyen karaktè Jeneralize ak Sistematik 20 • Atak yo te jeneralize 20 • Atak yo te genyen karaktè sistematik 20 Atak yo fèt an favè yon politik Deta oswa yon Òganizasyon 21 • Atak yo fèt an favè yon politik deta 21 • Atak yo te fèt an favè yon politik separe gang yo genyen 22 IV.
    [Show full text]
  • Ajans Gazeteciliği - Azertac
    Batman University Journal of Life Sciences Batman Üniversitesi Yaşam Bilimleri Dergisi Volume 9, Issue 2 (2019) Cilt 9 Sayı 2 (2019) Ajans Gazeteciliği - AzerTac Tahmina ALYAROVA Hacı Bayram Veli Üniversitesi, Radyo, Televizyon ve Sinema, Yüksek Lisans Öğrencisi, Ankara, [email protected] Geliş Tarihi/Received: Kabul Tarihi/Accepted: Yayın Tarihi/Published: 13.06.2019 09.09.2019 25.12.2019 ÖZ Tarih boyunca enformasyonu elde etmenin ve aktarmanın pek çok yöntemi olmuş ve bu konuda ateş, güvercin, peyk, telgraf, telefon, radyo, gazete ve haber ajansları gibi çeşitli araçlar kullanılmıştır. Süreç içerisinde enformasyon endüstrisi de giderek büyümüş, güç kazanmış ve nihayetinde ciddi bir gelişim sergilemiştir. Siyasal, sosyal ve ekonomik alanlardaki birçok ihtiyacın sonucunda ortaya çıkan haber ajansları da günümüzde en gelişmiş enformasyon kuruluşlarından biri sayılmaktadır. İlkel şekilde 19. yüzyılda ortaya çıkan haber ajanslarının profesyonelliğe ulaşması bütün dünyada farklı zaman dilimlerinde gerçekleşmiştir. Azerbaycan Cumhuriyetinin ilk ulusal haber ajansı olan AzerTac da kuruluşundan günümüze dek zaman zaman içinde bulunduğu zorlu süreçleri atlatarak dünya standartlarına uyum sağlamak adına önemli yol kat etmiştir. Bu çalışmada ajans gazeteciliğinin hangi ihtiyaçlar sonucu ortaya çıktığına, özelliklerine ve tarihi gelişim sürecine kısaca yer verilecek; Azerbaycan Halk Cumhuriyetinin mirası olan AzerTac Haber Ajansının doğuşu ve savaş dönemindeki gazetecilik performansı da dâhil olmak üzere günümüze kadar gelen gelişim süreci ise daha kapsamlı şekilde incelenecektir. Anahtar Sözcükler: Ajans gazeteciliği, haber ajansları, Azerbaycan, AzerTac, Azerbaycan Devlet Haber Ajansı Agencies Journalism - AzerTac ABSTRACT There have had various methods of obtaining and transferring of information, throughout history as fire, pigeon, pageboy, telegraph, telephone, radio, newspaper, news agencies etc. In the process, the information industry has also grown, gained strength, and ultimately has developed significantly.
    [Show full text]
  • Latvia and US Economic Relations: Trade, Investment and Representation by Kristaps Supe 128
    Latvia and the United States: Revisiting a Strategic Partnership in a Transforming Environment Editors: Andris Spruds and Diana Potjomkina Latvian Institute of International Affairs Riga, 2016 Railway infrastructure services Editors: Andris Spruds, Diana Potjomkina Authors: Maris Andzans, Kristine Berzina, Edijs Boss, Jon Dunne, Ilze Garoza, Donald N. Jensen, Alise Krapane, Matthew Melino, Magnus Nordenman, Diana Potjomkina, Jeffrey Rathke, Gunda Reire, Edward Rhodes, Ugis Romanovs, Liga Smildzina-Bertulsone, Andris Spruds, Kristaps Supe Scientific reviewers:Valters Scerbinskis, Toms Rostoks The opinions expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the positions of the Latvian Institute of International Affairs, any of the sponsors, any governmental or other entity. English language editor*: Emily Kernot, SIA endtoend editing Layout and cover design: Liga Rozentale *English language editing has been performed for select chapters. The book is published in collaboration with the Publishers Zinātne ISBN 978-9984-583-70-9 UDK 327(474.3:73) Sp950 © Authors of the articles, 2016 © Liga Rozentale, layout and cover design, 2016 © Latvian Institute of International Affairs, 2016 his is a book about building bridges and strengthening the partnership between Latvia and the United States. The pub- Tlication Latvia and the United States: Revisiting the Strategic Partnership in a Transforming Environment continues the tradi- tion of a thorough and regular re-assessment of bilateral engage- ment between the two nations. The publication starts with an analysis of relations in a wider historical and regional context and further deals with security and defence matters and coop- eration; economic cooperation; as well as trajectories of people- to-people diplomacy and the important role of Latvian diaspora in the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • López Rivera En Casa
    SEMANARIO INTERNACIONAL AÑO XVIII NO. 51 SEMANA DEL 20 AL 26 DE MAYO DE 2017 / AÑO 59 DE LA REVOLUCIÓN / PRECIO 2 PESOS / ISSN 1608—1838 Un fiscal en apuros Página 3 Emboscada a Lula Página 5 Jamaicana tras el Diamante Página 15 Foto: Víctor Birriel Querida presencia López Rivera en casa Página 16 Página 2 2 En la Semana DEL 20 AL 26 DE MAYO DE 2017 Por Néstor Rosa-Marbell OSCAR LÓPEZ RIVERA Tras su arresto, al igual que hicieron sus Corresponsal/San Juan otros camaradas, reclamó su condición de prisionero de guerra a partir del Protoco- scar López Rivera, que el 17 de mayo lo I de Ginebra de 1949, que ampara a los Opasado quedó en libertad tras 36 años combatientes contra el colonialismo, debido encarcelado en Estados Unidos por su lucha Sigue la lucha por a que Puerto Rico está sometido al dominio por la independencia de Puerto Rico, se ha de Washington, que lo invadió en 1898. convertido en símbolo de inspiración para Sus expresiones solidarias con la lucha de las nuevas generaciones de boricuas. los estudiantes de la estatal Universidad de Con 74 años de edad, el exprisionero po- Puerto Rico libre Puerto Rico le ha sumado el respaldo de una lítico reiteró su compromiso con la lucha por generación joven que llenó desde la media la libertad de su patria el primer día de su tarde del pasado 17 de mayo la Plaza de la liberación, después de haber pasado desde Convalecencia, en el sector capitalino de Río el 9 de febrero en confinamiento domiciliario Piedras, donde fue arropado con muestras en el hogar de su hija Clarisa, en San Juan, de admiración, y artistas como Andy Mon como resultado de una concesión hecha por tañez, Roy Brown y Zoraida Santiago le rin- el Buró de Prisiones de Estados Unidos al dieron tributo musical.
    [Show full text]