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Cuban president addresses anger over 'there are no beggars' claim

Cuban president addresses anger over 'there are no beggars' claim

News.com.au2 days ago
Cuba's president was forced to step in Tuesday after a minister's assertion that "there are no beggars" caused an uproar on the economic crisis-stricken island.
Labor Minister Marta Elena Feito on Monday told a parliamentary committee meeting about measures to address poverty that people rummaging for food in garbage bins are in fact "disguised as beggars."
"When you look at their hands, when you look at the clothes those people are wearing, they are disguised as beggars, they are not beggars. In Cuba, there are no beggars," she said in statements broadcast live on state television.
Social media users in the communist nation reacted with outrage, posting photos of people eating out of trash cans, while economist Pedro Monreal commented on X that there are "people disguised as 'ministers'" in Cuba.
President Miguel Diaz-Canel entered the fray on X Tuesday to lambast Feito's "lack of sensitivity."
He later told a parliamentary session that "none of us can act with arrogance, act with pretense, disconnected from the realities we live in."
Beggars, added Diaz-Canel, are "concrete expressions of social inequalities and the problems" Cuba faces.
Poverty levels have increased sharply as the Caribbean country reckons with its worst economic crisis in three decades, marked by shortages of food, medicine and fuel and daily power blackouts.
Observers blame a combination of US sanctions, domestic mismanagement of the economy, and the Covid-19 pandemic tanking the nation's vital tourist industry.
Last year, the government said there were 189,000 families and 350,000 individuals out of a population of 9.7 million living in "vulnerable" conditions and benefiting from social assistance programs.
AFP has observed a marked increase in the last two years of homeless people and beggars on the streets of a country where the average monthly salary is less than $20 at the unofficial exchange rate.
Cuba's economy shrunk for the second consecutive year in 2024, contracting 1.1 percent compared to 1.9 percent in 2023.
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Cuban president addresses anger over 'there are no beggars' claim
Cuban president addresses anger over 'there are no beggars' claim

News.com.au

time2 days ago

  • News.com.au

Cuban president addresses anger over 'there are no beggars' claim

Cuba's president was forced to step in Tuesday after a minister's assertion that "there are no beggars" caused an uproar on the economic crisis-stricken island. Labor Minister Marta Elena Feito on Monday told a parliamentary committee meeting about measures to address poverty that people rummaging for food in garbage bins are in fact "disguised as beggars." "When you look at their hands, when you look at the clothes those people are wearing, they are disguised as beggars, they are not beggars. In Cuba, there are no beggars," she said in statements broadcast live on state television. Social media users in the communist nation reacted with outrage, posting photos of people eating out of trash cans, while economist Pedro Monreal commented on X that there are "people disguised as 'ministers'" in Cuba. President Miguel Diaz-Canel entered the fray on X Tuesday to lambast Feito's "lack of sensitivity." He later told a parliamentary session that "none of us can act with arrogance, act with pretense, disconnected from the realities we live in." Beggars, added Diaz-Canel, are "concrete expressions of social inequalities and the problems" Cuba faces. Poverty levels have increased sharply as the Caribbean country reckons with its worst economic crisis in three decades, marked by shortages of food, medicine and fuel and daily power blackouts. Observers blame a combination of US sanctions, domestic mismanagement of the economy, and the Covid-19 pandemic tanking the nation's vital tourist industry. Last year, the government said there were 189,000 families and 350,000 individuals out of a population of 9.7 million living in "vulnerable" conditions and benefiting from social assistance programs. AFP has observed a marked increase in the last two years of homeless people and beggars on the streets of a country where the average monthly salary is less than $20 at the unofficial exchange rate. Cuba's economy shrunk for the second consecutive year in 2024, contracting 1.1 percent compared to 1.9 percent in 2023.

Major update in fate of 9/11 mastermind
Major update in fate of 9/11 mastermind

News.com.au

time6 days ago

  • News.com.au

Major update in fate of 9/11 mastermind

The chief architect of the 9/11 terrorist attacks could be sentenced to death after a court tossed out a plea deal that would have saved his life. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is accused of masterminding the September 11, 2001 attacks against the United States and was regarded as one of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden's most trusted henchmen. In 2003, the CIA captured him in Pakistan, after which he spent three years in secret prisons before arriving at Guantanamo in 2006. He is said to have planned out the deadly attacks from 'A to Z' and was also involved in a string of major plots against the US, where he attended university, the Sun reports. Mohammed as well as two alleged accomplices – Walid bin Attash and Mustafa al-Hawsawi – struck a deal with prosecutors on July 31 and agreed to plead guilty in exchange for a life sentence. The deal would allow the trio to be spared from the death penalty and remain jailed on the southern portion of the American Naval Base in Cuba. The agreement has sparked outrage from family members of victims who died during the 9/11 attacks. But a US appeals court on Friday scrapped the agreement, saying that both they and the American public deserved to see the defendants stand trial. Lloyd Austin, the Secretary of Defence under the Biden administration, attempted to halt the agreement by filing a motion to a military appeals court. In his brief, Austin cited the magnitude of the 9/11 attacks and argued that as defence secretary, he should decide on any plea agreements that would save the three men from the death penalty. Austin 'acted within the bounds of his legal authority, and we decline to second-guess his judgment,' judges Patricia Millett and Neomi Rao wrote in a ruling today. Congressional politicians have also slammed the plea deal, calling it a 'national disgrace' and a 'total miscarriage of justice.' 'The Biden-Harris Administration's weakness in the face of sworn enemies of the American people apparently knows no bounds,' said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell at the time. 'The plea deal with terrorists – including Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks that killed thousands of Americans – is a revolting abdication of the government's responsibility to defend America and provide justice. 'The only thing worse than negotiating with terrorists is negotiating with them after they are in custody.' Mohammed and al-Hawsawi were captured on March 1, 2003, in a joint CIA and Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence operation in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi. Walid bin Attash was captured in Karachi, Pakistan, in April 2003. Mohammed was held in secret CIA prisons up until his transfer to Guantanamo Bay in September 2006. However, before he was moved to Guantánamo, government officials interrogated Mohammed and his accomplices for years, torturing them and keeping them isolated in undisclosed locations. Mohammed endured 183 rounds of waterboarding – a form of torture where a person experiences the sensation of drowning when water is poured over a cloth covering their face. Terror attacks At least 2,753 people died at the site of the World Trade Center, where two planes crashed into the towers on September 11, 2001. A third plane hit the Pentagon, while a fourth, which was planned to strike Washington DC, crashed in a field in Pennsylvania after crew members and passengers stormed the cockpit. The heinous attacks sparked the war on terror after President George W. Bush ordered the US military to invade Afghanistan and Iraq in search of the terrorists responsible. The US government was warned by the CIA that the likely targets would be famous landmarks or symbols of US capitalism – but they did not know when or how. And none of them could have imagined the extent or horror of 9/11 when it did happen. On May 1, 2011, the most classified operation of the last 25 years was launched to kill Osama bin Laden. The Saudi-born terror chief became the world's most wanted man, hiding in plain sight in Pakistan for years before U.S. navy SEALs took him out in a daring raid. In the cover of night, Seal Team Six was sent to Abbottabad in Pakistan – where bin Laden was hiding. Within minutes, the Seals were within the compound and shot and killed the world's most wanted terrorist.

Community service providers react to Tasmanian election promises tackling cost-of-living pressures
Community service providers react to Tasmanian election promises tackling cost-of-living pressures

ABC News

time03-07-2025

  • ABC News

Community service providers react to Tasmanian election promises tackling cost-of-living pressures

Bills are going up and wages are sluggish. Money just won't stretch as far as it used to and it's leaving many Tasmanians going without. The growing cost-of-living issue in Tasmania has been described by some as a crisis. Now it's a staple of Tasmania's snap election, with both major parties jostling to prove they are the right ones to ease living costs in the state. But there is no magic wand to fix a situation that has been steadily growing worse for years. According to the Tasmanian Council of Social Service (TasCOSS), 120,000 Tasmanians are living below the poverty line, meaning they don't have the resources to meet basic needs. One in five — or 50,000 — Tasmanians are experiencing energy poverty, meaning they can't pay their electricity bills so they ration energy use, go into debt or make cuts to other essentials. And more than 5,000 people are on the social housing waitlist. The ABC spoke to several community service organisations about what they wanted to see parties doing to address cost-of-living issues this election. As the manager of Goodwood Community Centre, a Neighbourhood House in Hobart, Natham Reynolds is at the coalface. "Our numbers coming through the door are really huge at the moment," Mr Reynolds said. "Each week we have more than 1,000 people. "We've just had a Christmas in July lunch where we had 70 people here." Mr Reynolds has been the manager for more than two years. He says the demand for services increases week on week. He also said the work is difficult and challenging but worth it. "It really takes a bit of a toll on you," he said. "You like to leave your work at home, but you're always thinking when you go home, 'Is there any more I can do or where else can we help?' "You find you're always trying to think of new ideas or different support systems to help people, even once you finish work." Simone Zell is the chief executive of Neighbourhood Houses Tasmania. She said there needed to be a fundamental shift in how we address cost of living. "So that we have priorities that are about supporting people to have access to the basics," Ms Zell said. Ms Zell said access to earlier intervention when it comes to healthcare was crucial. "We need to make sure that people can have access to healthcare where they are so they are not in those more crisis situations and they are not presenting at hospitals," she said. The Salvation Army's Amelia Natoli said the issue for many in the community sector was ensuring adequate funding for existing programs. "For many of our programs we're on the same level of funding that we might have got five or 10 years ago, and everyone's aware that the cost of doing anything has gone up," Ms Natoli said. "For us, we're actually not able to deliver the same level of service for the same price as we could five or 10 years ago. She said without increased funding the organisation could not "keep the lights on" at its family and domestic violence refuge or at its alcohol and other drugs space. "But until we can actually just keep the current services running at the level that they need, it's really hard for us as an organisation to ask, 'Can we have further funding to be able to add another six beds at our family violence refuge?' Because we just don't know that we'll be able to staff it and keep everything running," Ms Natoli said. Loaves and Fishes chief executive Andrew Hillier said one-in-five Tasmanians were facing food insecurity, and innovative solutions were needed. He said he wanted to see the parties embrace a food-systems approach, bringing together different organisations to deal with issues. "Organisations like Eat Well Tas that are focused on education, Neighbourhood Houses that distribute food and … farmers who grow and in some cases their food gets rejected." Mr Hillier said the Liberal government held a roundtable before the election was called, but it needed to go beyond facilitating discussions — he said the ideas needed resources. "[We want to make] sure we've got markets and ways of buying food, creating alternative markets for local, small and medium farmers and producers, so that food can be available at lower cost." He also said it was essential to support the grassroots community organisations on the frontline delivering support. Labor has been coming out hard on cost of living, offering everything from a price cap on electricity prices (they won't be able to rise more than 2.5 per cent) to freezing car registrations for a year, which will save the average person $15 a year. Apprentices would be eligible for half-price registrations. The party also has a policy to allow people to pay all government-issued bills monthly at no extra charge compared to annual payment, including car registrations. It would invest in Loaves and Fishes' food strategy, providing it with $5 million over five years. The Liberals have an energy-saver policy in place: the renewable energy dividend. Most recently it resulted in $60 shaved off Tasmanian power bills. The Liberals' big cost-of-living promise this campaign is TasInsure, a Tasmanian-owned insurance company the party claims would result in Tasmanians saving up to $250 a year on insurance bills, while businesses would save up to 20 per cent. The party has also announced half-price bus fares would be extended for another year. The Greens have a whole raft of policies designed to address cost-of-living pressures, including putting a stop to "unreasonable" rent rises and introducing means-based fines. Community sector leaders are generally positive about the policies announced during the campaign so far, but the feeling is most pledges do not go far enough. Ms Zell said some of the policies could be better targeted at vulnerable Tasmanians. The Salvation Army's Amelia Natoli said even a $15 discount for those who are struggling would provide relief. "I do think the impact it would have if it is particularly focused on those individuals that we work with could certainly be quite high," she said. "We really need to look at how we keep our most vulnerable front of mind." Ms Zell said in the end, many of the policies were just "tinkering around the edges". "I really hope that in these last two weeks [of the election campaign] that we actually see some brave vision around 'let's actually do things differently'," she said. "We do have so many Tasmanians right now really struggling and we're looking at how we can shift that situation so that we can see people's lives being changed." To see more of the parties' promises to address cost of living and more, go to the ABC's election promise tracker.

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