Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Mass media in Cuba

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Users of a public WiFi hotspot in Havana, Cuba

The mass media inCuba consist of several different types: television, radio, newspapers, and internet. The Cuban media are tightly controlled by the Cuban government led by theCommunist Party of Cuba (PCC) in the past five decades. The PCCstrictly censors news, information and commentary, and restricts dissemination of foreign publications to tourist hotels. Journalists must operate within the confines of laws against anti-government propaganda and the insulting of officials, which carry penalties of up to three years in prison. Private ownership of broadcast media is prohibited, and the government owns all mainstream media outlets.[1][2]

Newspapers

[edit]
See also:List of newspapers in Cuba

Cuba has several dozen online regional newspapers. The only national daily paper isGranma, the official organ of the PCC. A weekly version,Granma International, is published inEnglish,Spanish,French,Portuguese,Turkish andGerman, available online.Havana residents also have their own weekly, Havana-oriented paper,Tribuna de La Habana. The weeklyJuventud Rebelde is the official organ of the Communist Youth Union. The biweeklyBohemia is the country's only general-interest newsmagazine. Cuba's official news agency is Prensa Latina, which publishes several magazines, includingCuba Internacional, directed at the foreign audience.[3]

Granma regularly features speeches byRaúl Castro and other leaders of the Cuban government, including former PresidentFidel Castro's column, "Reflexiones de Fidel" (Fidel's Reflections), official announcements of the Cuban government, popular sketches highlighting the history of Cuba's revolutionary struggle from the 19th to the 21st century, developments in Latin America and world politics, steps by Cuba's workers and farmers to defend and advance thesocialist revolution, and developments in industry, agriculture, science, the arts, and sports in Cuba today.[1]

The Prensa Latina was founded shortly after the Cuban Revolution. The agency was founded at the initiative ofErnesto Che Guevara similarly to Agencia Latina founded byJuan Perón in Argentina, to spread government ideology and neutralize American propaganda.[1]The written press began in Cuba in 1764 withLa Gazeta, followed by thePapel Periódico de La Habana (Havana Periodical Paper) in 1790. Cuba currently has several newspapers, including the following:

National circulation

[edit]
NameHeadquartersCirculationFoundedWebsite
GranmaHavanaDaily (except on Sundays)4 October 1965granma.cu
Juventud RebeldeHavanaDaily (except on Mondays)21 October 1965juventudrebelde.cu
TrabajadoresHavanaWeekly6 June 1970trabajadores.cu

Provincial circulation

[edit]

Each of Cuba's16 provinces has a regional weekly, which acts as the official newspaper published by each provincial Communist Party branch. The two most recently launched,El Artemiseño andMayabeque, began publication in 2011, to serve the newly formed provinces of Artemisa andMayabeque.

Each weekly has its own website with local news, updated daily, which offers weekly print editions for free download in thePDF format. Some also publish online editions in English.

NameProvinceCirculationFoundedWebsite
Sierra MaestraSantiago de CubaWeekly7 September 1957sierramaestra.cu
AdelanteCamagüeyWeekly12 January 1959adelante.cu
GuerrilleroPinar del RíoWeekly6 July 1960guerrillero.cu
GirónMatanzasWeekly5 December 1961giron.cu
VenceremosGuantánamoWeekly25 July 1962venceremos.cu
VanguardiaVilla ClaraWeekly9 August 1962vanguardia.cu
Ahora!HolguínWeekly19 November 1962ahora.cu
VictoriaIsla de la JuventudWeekly20 February 1967periodicovictoria.cu
La DemajaguaGranmaWeekly10 October 1977lademajagua.cu
Periódico 26Las TunasWeekly26 July 1978periodico26.cu
EscambraySancti SpíritusWeekly4 January 1979escambray.cu
InvasorCiego de ÁvilaWeekly26 July 1979invasor.cu
5 de SeptiembreCienfuegosWeekly5 September 19805septiembre.cu
Tribuna de La HabanaHavanaWeekly7 October 1980tribuna.cu
El ArtemiseñoArtemisaWeekly11 January 2011artemisadiario.cu
MayabequeMayabequeWeekly11 January 2011diariomayabeque.cu

Role of the Church

[edit]

Although the press is publicly owned, magazines and bulletins owned by the Catholic Church and other Christian denominations are also published and available to any Cuban citizen. In Havana, the Catholic Church publishes magazines such asPalabra Nueva andEspacio Laical monthly. In the diocese of Pinar del Río,Vitral is published bimonthly. These magazines and bulletins include religious instruction and news from the church. The bulletin with the highest circulation isVida cristiana, published weekly in Havana; it reaches the majority of Catholics in the country. Today, the Church seeks to expand to different forms of media such as television and radio which it currently has no access.[1]

Radio

[edit]
See also:Cuban Institute of Radio and Television

In 2005 Cubans had at least 3.9 millionradio receivers, and the country had 169AM, and 55FM stations. TheCuban Institute of Radio and Television serves as the government's administrative outlet for broadcasting. Of the six national AM/FM radio networks, the top three areRadio Progreso,Radio Reloj, andRadio Rebelde, in that order. Two other national radio networks that also provide news and entertainment are Radio Musical Nacional (CMBF) and Radio Enciclopedia. Another station,Radio Taíno, promotestourism. The Cuban government also operatesRadio Havana, the official Cuban international short-wave radio service. Cuba's restriction of foreign broadcast media is one reason the U.S. government has sponsored radio broadcasting into Cuba throughRadio y Televisión Martí, much of which is jammed.[3]

Before the Cuban Revolution

[edit]

Cuba was one of the first countries in the Americas to have radio service. In 1922, under the cooperation of the US-basedInternational Telephone and Telegraph, the first radio station in the country (2LC) began broadcasts on 22 August. The radio stations in the country were developed by private initiatives, and its programming was initially based on news and entertainment.

BusinessmanGoar Mestre[4] started construction ofRadio Center, inspired by the Radio City in New York.[5] Mestre began broadcasts on Channel 6 (CMQ) on December 18 of that year. UnderFulgencio Batista's dictatorship censorship was imposed.[6] Radio's primary purpose in Cuba was to enhance the "high culture" education of the Cuban citizen.

Radio stations and networks included:[7]

During and after the Cuban Revolution

[edit]

Soon after theCuban Revolution in 1959,Fidel Castro's government applied a series of measures that transformed all national media.Rebelde, the first radio station developed under the revolution, started broadcasting on February 24.

During the early years of the revolution there was a division between the mainstream media in Cuba, created with private capital that opposed the new political situation. A series of small radio stations in favor of the new government, organized an "Independent Front of Free Broadcasters" (Spanish:Frente Independiente de Emisoras Libres). These radio stations were recognized as official by the new government. The government would develop a Bureau of Broadcasting under the political leadership of the PCC. Radio stations in the country were completely put under state control on May 24, 1962, under the management of the newly established Cuban Broadcasting Institute. Under the new broadcasting system, all media were to meet a set of values established by the government to strengthen the political process in the country, some names of radio stations were changed, and the coverage of radio services were extended to reach the whole country. In 1975, the agency changed its name to theCuban Institute of Radio and Television.[9]

Censorship

[edit]

Cubans cannot watch or listen to independent, private, or foreign broadcasts. In 1963, using Soviet-supplied equipment, Cuba became the first nation in the Western Hemisphere tojam radio broadcasts, the apparent targets being the anti-Castro stations in the US.[5]

Current radio channels

[edit]
  • Radio Rebelde – news, music, sport
  • Radio Reloj – news
  • Radio Habana Cuba – external, languages include Spanish, English, French, Portuguese
  • Radio Progreso – entertainment[10]

Television

[edit]
See also:Television in Cuba andCuban Institute of Radio and Television

In 2005 Cubans had at least 3 milliontelevision sets, and the country had 58 TV broadcasting stations. The Cuban Institute of Radio and Television serves as the government's administrative outlet for broadcasting. The Cuban television system is made up of two networks: Cubavisión and Tele Rebelde. Cuba's restriction of foreign broadcast media is one reason the U.S. government has sponsored television broadcasting into Cuba throughRadio y Televisión Martí, much of which is jammed.[3]

Before the Cuban Revolution

[edit]

Cuba was one of the first countries in the Americas to have television service. The popularity of radio led to the development and launch of television stations. The first years of television in Cuba were marked by a climate of competitiveness between two Cuban businessmen backed by US companies, Gaspar Pumarejo and Goar Mestre. Mestre started construction ofRadio Center, inspired by the Radio City in New York, while Pumarejo tried to develop a television studio in his own home.[5] Pumarejo's channel (Unión Radio Televisión) was the first TV channel to start broadcasts in the island; it began broadcasting on 24 October 1950 with an address by President Carlos Prío Socarrás from the Presidential Palace. Mestre began broadcasts on Channel 6 (CMQ) on December 18 of that year.Telenovelas, news, cooking shows, and comedy groups were shown. After Union Radio TV went on the air, Cuban demand for television sets soared.[6] UnderFulgencio Batista's dictatorship censorship was imposed.[6] Television's primary purpose in Cuba was to enhance the "high culture" education of the Cuban citizen.

During and after the Cuban Revolution

[edit]

Soon after theCuban Revolution in 1959,Fidel Castro's government applied a series of measures that transformed all national media. Television channels in the country were completely put under state control on May 24, 1962, under the management of the newly established Cuban Broadcasting Institute. Under the new broadcasting system, all media were to meet a set of values established by the government to strengthen the political process in the country, some names of TV stations were changed, and the coverage of the TV services were extended to reach the whole country. In 1975, the agency changed its name to the Cuban Institute of Radio and Television.[9]

TV channels

[edit]
  • Cubavision
  • Portal de la TV Cubana[10]

Internet

[edit]
See also:Internet in Cuba

Sources of independent news about Cuba can be found on the Internet. They includeLa Nueva Cuba, founded in 1998,Havana Times, founded in 2008 and edited in Nicaragua, and14ymedio, founded in 2014. Another,El Toque won some awards for its coverage in 2023, along with editor-in-chiefJosé J. Nieves.[11][12] Its coverage has been criticized by the Cuban government.[13]

Cuba has one of the lowest Internet circulation rates[clarification needed] in the Western hemisphere. The Cuban Internet is characterized by a low number of connections, limited bandwidth, censorship and high cost. The Internet in Cuba stagnated since its introduction in 1996 due to several factors:

  • a lack of funding due to the devastation of Cuba's economy after the fall of the Soviet Union
  • the U.S. embargo which delayed construction infrastructure and made equipment expensive and difficult to obtain
  • tight government restrictions which identified the Internet as a tool for subversion of the Cuban Revolution[1]

Starting in 2007 this situation began to improve — Internet remains illegal in private homes but government-owned internet cafes offer Internet access. 118 cybercafes operate in Cuba. In 2015, the government opened the first public wifi hotspots in 35 public locations and reduced prices and increased speeds for Internet access in cybercafes.[14]

Censorship

[edit]
See also:Internet censorship in Cuba

The Cuban internet is among the most tightly regulated in the world. All content is subject to review by theDepartment of Revolutionary Orientation. At Internet cafes Cuban citizens have to give their name and address. All material intended for publication on the Internet must be approved by the National Registry of Serial Publications in advance. One report found that many foreign news outlet websites are not blocked in Cuba, but the slow connections and outdated technology in Cuba makes it impossible for citizens to load these websites. Rather than having complex filtering systems, the government relies on the high cost of getting online and the telecommunications infrastructure that is slow to restrict Internet access. Reports have shown that the Cuban government uses Avila Link software to monitor citizens use of the Internet. The government has obtained citizens usernames and passwords in order to closely monitor emails.[15]

Dissidents accuse the government of not providing affordable home internet access for political reasons. The Cuban government blames the US for the poor state of telecoms infrastructure, which it says is caused by the American economic embargo imposed in the 1960s.[16]

Internet users in Cuba per 1,000 inhabitants (2002–2011) according to Cuban state statistics ONE

In recent times, censorship of the Internet has slowly relaxed. In 2007, it became possible for members of the public to legally buy a computer. Since June 4, 2013 Cubans can sign up withETECSA, the state telecom company, for public Internet access at 118 centers across the country. The government approved wifi hotspots which were opened in 2015 give largely unfettered internet access and access to social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter; however, opposition sites are blocked. The cost of the new access at $4.50 an hour is still high in a country where state salaries average $20 a month. As of 2016, only 5% of Cubans enjoy web access at home.[16]

Circumventing censorship and controversies

[edit]

Citizens have developed numerous techniques to circumvent the government's control of the Internet. Some get online through embassies and coffee shops, or purchase accounts through the black market. The black market consists of professional or former government officials who have been cleared to have Internet access who sell or rent their usernames and passwords to citizens who want to have access. Bloggers and dissidents also use USB keys to get their work published by giving their pieces to people who have an easier time getting online, who then upload their items from the USB.[15]

These USB sticks are known as "El Paquete Semanal" or weekly package noting their frequency of distribution across the Island.[17] A paquete contains 1 terabyte of data filled with anything from pirated foreign television, music videos, apps, news, and other digital media content otherwise inaccessible to the Cuban population. Paquetes cost around 5 Cuban Pesos or about 20 US cents making them much a much more reliable and economical way to consume media.[18] They are also largely tolerated, so long as they do not contain pornography or political dissent although the latter requirement is often broken.

In 2006,Guillermo Fariñas, a Cuban psychologist, independent journalist, and political dissident, held a seven-month hunger strike to protest Internet censorship in Cuba. He ended it in the autumn of 2006, due to severe health problems. He stated that he was ready to die in the struggle against censorship.[19]

Alan Gross, an American government contractor under employment for theU.S. Agency for International Development, was arrested in Cuba on December 3, 2009, and was convicted on March 12, 2011, for covertly distributing laptops and cellphones on the island.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdea., hudson, rex; division, library of congress. federal research."Cuba : a country study".The Library of Congress. Retrieved2017-04-23.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^"Six facts about censorship in Cuba".www.amnesty.org. 11 March 2016. Retrieved2020-12-11.
  3. ^abcCuba country profile.Library of CongressFederal Research Division (September 2006).This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain.
  4. ^Pablo Sirvén (2013).El rey de la TV: Goar Mestre y la pelea entre gobiernos y medios latinoamericanos, de Fidel Castro a Juan Perón (in Spanish). Buenos Aires:Editorial Sudamericana [es].ISBN 9789500745345.
  5. ^abcMonografias.com, Dany Herranz Delgado."Breve historia de la televisión en el mundo, en Cuba y en la provincia de Sancti Spíritus (página 2) - Monografias.com".www.monografias.com (in Spanish). Retrieved2017-04-23.
  6. ^abcSalwen 1994.
  7. ^Sterling 2004.
  8. ^abJerome S. Berg (2013).Early Shortwave Stations: A Broadcasting History Through 1945.McFarland & Company.ISBN 978-0-7864-7411-0.
  9. ^ab"icrt".www.cubagob.cu. Archived fromthe original on 2014-03-18. Retrieved2017-04-24.
  10. ^ab"Cuba profile - Media".BBC News. 2014-12-17. Retrieved2017-04-24.
  11. ^"Cuban publication El Toque receives award from the Latin American Studies Association".LatAm Journalism Review by the Knight Center. Retrieved2024-07-28.
  12. ^"José J. Nieves".International Center for Journalists. Retrieved2024-07-28.
  13. ^Robinson, Circles (2022-10-31)."A New Cuban State Security & Media Attack against El Toque".Havana Times. Retrieved2024-07-28.
  14. ^"Reporters sans frontières - Internet - Cuba".archive.is. 2011-07-27. Archived from the original on 2011-07-27. Retrieved2017-04-24.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  15. ^ab"Cuba: Long live freedom (but not for the Internet)!".Enemies of the Internet. 2014-03-11. Archived fromthe original on 2017-09-25. Retrieved2017-04-24.
  16. ^abPedro, Emilio San (2016-03-21)."Cuba internet access still severely restricted".BBC News. Retrieved2017-04-24.
  17. ^Humphreys, Laura-Zoë. "Utopia in a Package? Digital Media Piracy and the Politics of Entertainment in Cuba." Hot Spots, Cultural Anthropology website, March 23, 2017.https://culanth.org/fieldsights/1090-utopia-in-a-package-digital-media-piracy-and-the-politics-of-entertainment-in-cubaArchived 2018-04-10 at theWayback Machine
  18. ^Reyes, Mario Luis. 2016. “Danys: el hombre detrás de El Paquete.” Cachivache Media, November 4.https://cachivachemedia.com/danys-el-hombre-detras-de-el-paquete-449ac31ec7a0
  19. ^"Guillermo Fariñas ends seven-month-old hunger strike for Internet access | Reporters without borders".RSF (in French). Archived fromthe original on 2018-11-20. Retrieved2017-04-24.

Bibliography

[edit]

External links

[edit]
History
Pre-Revolution
Post-Revolution
Cities
Geography
Politics
Military
Law enforcement
Intelligence
Economy
Culture
Society
Demographics
By occupation
Mass media in Latin America and the Caribbean
Sovereign
states
Dependencies
andterritories
Media of North America
Sovereign states
Dependencies and
other territories
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mass_media_in_Cuba&oldid=1278687751"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp