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Bye bye overcrowded "camello"
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Havana.– First comes the stink of diesel, then a metallic roar, and finally a tower of black smoke that tells you the "camello" –the camel– has reached your stop.

These hulking 18-wheeled beasts, iron mutants made of two Soviet-era buses welded together on a flatbed and pulled by a separate cab, have long been Havana's public transport nightmare –bumpy, hot and jammed with up to 400 passengers at a time.

But their gradual disappearance is a telling sign of change in the twilight of the Fidel Castro age. The last "camello" is expected to go out of service in Havana on Sunday night.

The camello, so named for its humped front and rear sections, is being eclipsed by thousands of new city buses from China as the government under Castro's brother, Raul, resuscitates a public transportation system on the brink of collapse.

Route M-6, running from the capital's southern outskirts uptown to the University of Havana, is the city's last remaining camello route, and municipal authorities say they have been told to pull all camellos off it this weekend.

"I think we should build a monument to the camello," said retiree Salvador Carrera, a camello passenger. "It has been an extraordinary thing."

The capital aside, camellos are far from extinct. The government has an island-wide fleet of more than 1,000, and those from Havana could be used to augment bus service elsewhere, transportation employees say.

Like those ubiquitous Detroit cars that predate the U.S. embargo, the camello is a definer of Cuba on wheels, but without the fun of a San Francisco cable car ride or the clean efficiency of the Washington, D.C. Metro.

What it lacks in glamor, it makes up for in sheer mass that dwarfs its Chinese successors. "We can carry up to 400 people. The bus cannot," lamented conductor Estela Doira. "I'm happy, also sad, because the camello handles a lot more than the bus."

At the start of a camello run one morning last week, it took just over five minutes for 75 passengers to swarm up the steep steps and through the narrow doors at the rear. Doira hung out of a window to make sure no one got stuck. The doors, thin metal with sharp edges, shut with a metallic crack that sounded sharp enough to sever limbs.

The fortunate got one of the 58 plastic seats, while the rest had to stand. Each alighting passenger paid Doira 20 centavos, less than an American penny.

Camellos have no shock absorbers, and every pothole sends a violent jolt through one's feet. At each stop more passengers crowd in –people carrying infants, backpacks, gardening tools and beer bottles stuffed with black market honey. Baby-faced soldiers squeeze in beside college students in hot-pink sunglasses and elderly men looking thin enough to be crushed in the crowd.

It's hard to work one's way on or off, and the driver in his cab can't hear people screaming, "The door! Open the door!" "Move it, companeros! Move to the front!" they yell.

With no air conditioning, the tropical heat quickly becomes unbearable, and the stench sets in –fresh sweat and body odor, mixed with exhaust and rotting food. Those seated stick their heads out of the windows.

"Only in Cuba. In other countries people wouldn't put up with so much," whispered retiree Mari Gonzalez, who was fortunate enough to snag a seat.

Cubans joke that camellos are racier than a Saturday night at the movies –full of sex and crime, pickpockets and gropers. Overheard conversations between passengers feed the onboard rumor mill: Fidel Castro is dead. No, wait, he's healthy again; he spent last weekend at the beach. The peso will strengthen against the dollar. Or maybe will be replaced with a new currency.

The camello was born in response to fuel shortages in the early 1990s, when the Soviet Union collapsed and Cuba lost its annual $6 billion in subsidies. The economy has since recovered thanks to heavy borrowing from China and nearly 100,000 barrels of oil a day from Venezuela.

Cuba is spending $2 billion to upgrade public transportation and has imported 3,000 modern buses just for the capital. The Yutongs are less sturdy than the camellos and crews are repaving streets to spare them wear and tear. Fares are double the camello's but offer far more seats and a dramatically smoother ride. Riders can climb on and off easily, ensuring faster trips.

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COMMENTS
15 comment(s)
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Written by: gouletcolonial, 20 Apr 2008 6:58 AM
From: Canada
paradise is getting even better ....my heart sings
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Written by: josean, 20 Apr 2008 8:54 AM
From: United States
Cuba

Without a METRO but with Camellos!

Literacy:

definition: age 15 and over can read and write
total population: 99.8%
male: 99.8%
female: 99.8% (2002 census)

Source: CIA WORLD FACT BOOK

https://www.cia.gov/library/publi....orld-factbook/geos/cu.html#People


Dominican Republic

Without Camellos but with a METRO!

Literacy:

definition: age 15 and over can read and write
total population: 87%
male: 86.8%
female: 87.2% (2002 census)

Source: CIA WORLD FACT BOOK

https://www.cia.gov/library/publi....orld-factbook/geos/dr.html#People

Now to all the John Birch Society members on DT, I am not defending Socialism, Communism, Fidelism or any other ism, I am just pointing out facts gathered by the CIA.
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Written by: Belial, 20 Apr 2008 11:08 AM
From: United States, Texas
The revolution, riding on a glorious "camel" or one of 3000 new Chinese manufactured buses, moves on to do combat on a new front where the revolution will also triumph.

The revolution now celebrates its many and huge victories in transportation, energy, education, health care, nutrition, housing, and biotechnology, victories that have already resulted in the people of Cuba enjoying the highest standard of living of all the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean, if we use essential services such as education, health care, housing and nutrition ... rather than luxury cars, vibrators, cell phones, erotic extensions, viagra, CD porn and other status-conscious consumers goods ... as indicators of standards of living.

In the capitalist-controlled parts of Latin America and the Caribbean, say Brazil or Mexico, we find wretched shantytowns and homelessness for millions, pestilence killing multitudes, widespread malnutrition, and growing illiteracy as IMF demands school closings.
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Written by: Belial, 20 Apr 2008 11:19 AM
From: United States, Texas
Literacy:

"definition: age 15 and over can read and write
total population: 87%
male: 86.8%
female: 87.2% (2002 census)"

oooo

The CIA is extremely generous about the magnitude of illiteracy in the DR.

In the capitalist-controlled and exploited parts of Latin America and the Caribbean, education means that the state pays depraved and perverted Nazarene experts on divine beings to run "good schools" solely for the youth of the bourgeoisie and middle class.

As for the urban and rural proletariat and the poor, they are provided sufficient education to write their names and to count up to the number 500. And that's all.


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Written by: gouletcolonial, 20 Apr 2008 2:10 PM
From: Canada
like a breath of hot air
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Written by: Edward, 20 Apr 2008 6:04 PM
From: United States, Leominster, Massachusetts
Literacy in DR is now about 91%.... the 87% is from 2002.
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Written by: Edward, 20 Apr 2008 6:09 PM
From: United States, Leominster, Massachusetts
I can't wait to see el Metro de La Habana!
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Written by: Belial, 20 Apr 2008 7:20 PM
From: United States, Texas
"Literacy in DR is now about 91%.... the 87% is from 2002."

0000

To be sure, literacy statistics and rates are rather subjective.

List of countries by literacy rate, as included in the United Nations Development Programme Report 2007/2008.

See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List....ntries_by_literacy_rate#endnote_1

Wiki discusses the methodology the Report used.

The top four countries by literacy rate are Georgia with 100.0% [the only country with a perfect score], Iceland with 99.9%, and, guess who, Cuba [tied with Estonia for 3rd place] with 99.8%.

There are 37 countries tied for 15th place, all with 99.0% literacy. Shockingly, the 15th place group includes, among others, countries like Haiti [!!!], USA, and Canada.

The Dominican Republic is tied with Equatorial Guinea for the 108th place, each with 87.0% literacy, according to the United Nations Development Programme Report 2007/2008.

The 2007/2008 Report, released last week, looked at 177 countries.
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Written by: Belial, 20 Apr 2008 7:33 PM
From: United States, Texas
I believe that the real rate for each country is about 20 points less than what is reported.

In the USA, perhaps 40 points less than what is reported.

"Look John, have you read this here porn?"

"Well, you see, Fred, I quit school kind of early."
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Written by: Escott, 20 Apr 2008 7:41 PM
From: Dominican Republic, Sosua/Cabarete
Camels are nothing more than Cattle cars. It is a furniture van with a few windows being pulled by a tractor. I haven't seen the Chinese buses but they will probably fall apart in 2 months the way the cubans stack the people inside of their transportation because there isn't MUCH of it.

As far as literacy I would rather be dumb but free just like Belial!
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Written by: Belial, 20 Apr 2008 11:44 PM
From: United States, Texas
" I haven't seen the Chinese buses but they will probably fall apart in 2 months the way the cubans stack the people inside of their transportation because there isn't MUCH of it."

0000

The recent purchase of 3,000 Yutongs, a brand of Chinese manufactured buses, is the third major Chinese bus purchase by the Cuban workers during the last five years.
http://english.people.com.cn/200510/18/eng20051018_215030.html

The Cuban workers bought 400 Yutongs in April 2005 and another 630 in October 2005.

In 2005, a Yutong sold for about $80,000. The price is stable.

The Yutongs have performed magnificently in Cuba. The Cuban workers really like them.

Did you know that the Chinese have built a after-sale service facility in Havana?

Well, you should know it before you open your big mouth.

Did you know that Chinese are selling engines ... [ and have delivered the engines] and equipment for railroad lines that will run the lenght of Cuba, not just in Havana?





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Written by: gouletcolonial, 21 Apr 2008 12:46 AM
From: Canada
the cuban workers really like them......the cuban workers are told what to like,,,,,pity the cuban workers in the workers paradise
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Written by: gouletcolonial, 29 Apr 2008 7:29 AM
From: Canada
monster buses vanish from streets when will secret police vanish from streets...it will be soon....2008 the last year ..... the nightmare is coming to an end
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Written by: hectorvargas, 12 May 2008 9:50 PM
From: United States
Haiti population 8,706,497: Litrarcy 52.9%: Life Expectancy: 55.4 Male; 58.8 females--------------------Dominican Republic population 9,365,818: Literacy 87%: Life Expectancy: 71.3 male: 74.9 female-- Cuba:population 11,394,043: Literacy: 99.8%: Life Expetancy: 74.9 male: 79.4. The question to asked is are so called democratic government assuming responsibilities in given their citizen a competitive education. Competitive with private ones. Are they creating jobs for the future graduates or are they letting them stand on the corners to discussed politics. This is what those pollster should be doing, examining the young population and where are they going in a world of tomorrow. Take the U.S. for example, with all its so called opportunities yet the greater majorities of Latino"s don't get to obtained a High School Diploma. It can't be that all of them are lazy and not smart enough to dominate an American education, or is it the system that is design that way? Take a poll of that.
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Written by: gouletcolonial, 12 May 2008 10:03 PM
From: Canada
you would find very few sensible Dominicans of any education level that would want to live in either of those two countries.......for get about it...no line ups at their embassies
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