Cuba, In The Wake Of Paloma
Residents Reeling From Two Powerful Hurricanes This Year Woke Up To Yet More Destruction
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Residents recover their belongings after Hurricane Paloma passed through Santa Cruz del Sur, Cuba, Nov. 9, 2008. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)
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A boy carries a dog as he wades through a flooded street in Santa Cruz del Sur, Cuba, Nov. 9, 2008. Paloma weakened into a tropical storm over Cuba on Sunday after flooding the southern coast with crashing waves and a powerful storm surge. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)
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Debris from Hurricane Paloma block a road in Santa Cruz del Sur, Cuba, Nov. 9, 2008. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)
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Residents walk along a highway after Hurricane Paloma passed through Santa Cruz del Sur, Cuba, Nov. 9, 2008. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)
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Play CBS Video Video Paloma Strikes Cuba One million Cubans in central and eastern Cuba prepare for Hurricane Paloma to hit. Portia Siegelbaum reports from Havana
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Cubans already reeling from two devastating hurricanes this year woke up to scenes of yet more destruction.
The first pictures coming out of Santa Cruz del Sur, where late-season Hurricane Paloma made landfall Saturday evening as a Category 3 storm, reveal a cat’s cradle of wooden beams and bricks - all that is left of this city of some 10,000 people.
A massive evacuation operation protected lives here where nearly 76 years ago to the day a hurricane left 3,000 dead.
There are no estimates yet of the latest economic damage, but observers say infrastructure took less of a hit than was feared. Still, for the local residents of this south central fishing community, the personal property losses are huge.
Civil defense workers and some dogs can be seen picking their way through the rubble dominating the landscape where only an occasional house has been left standing. The main communication tower was brought down, broken in half like a toothpick, by hurricane force winds of 120 mph. Storm surge drove sea waters for a mile inland as four-foot-high waves swamped wooden homes closest to the coast.
Trees and shrubs bordering the sea look like clotheslines festooned with sheets and shirts, tossed there by the wind as walls went down. Refrigerators and washing machines were picked up like children’s toys, according to residents, and have been left lying in the sand.
Paloma weakened as it sped northward over central Cuba, finally departing in the early hours of Sunday as a tropical depression.
Earlier this year, Hurricanes Ike and Gustav caused damage topping $8 billion and destroyed one-third of the island’s food crops. And rain and flooding from Paloma have reportedly destroyed fields planted with quick-growing crops that the Government has promoted in an effort to avoid greater food shortages.
Since it was hit by the first two storms in August-September, the Communist government has accepted aid from the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, various U.N. agencies, and from countries ranging from Russia, Brazil, Mexico and Canada to China and Venezuela. It’s come in the form of food, water filters, temporary shelter materials, mosquito netting, mattresses and other necessities.
One country Cuba says it won’t take aid from is the United States, which offered $5 million after Hurricanes Ike and Gustav.
Vice President Jose Ramon Machado, in Santa Cruz this morning to assess the damage, reiterated the government’s refusal saying, “We already gave our opinion about this, we made our point clear. The problem here is the embargo; that is what is causing the real damage. It's been going on for 40 years. That's what must be evaluated when people talk about ‘aid,' the rest is pure hypocrisy."
Instead of handouts, Havana wants the U.S. to allow them to buy the needed food and construction materials without demanding cash in advance, and without the slew of restrictions that now govern one-way trade between the two nations (as Washington prohibits the importation of any goods from Cuba).
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- When are we going to try Bush for war crimes
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- We are going to make Cuba the 51st state or trade Palin and Alaska for cuba how about that shi! Sarah.
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- Yep, the US can''t even afford to clean up New Orleans, Galveston....
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- Here is a deal for you downsteamjim. The US continues to show it''s arrogance and lack of empathy towards the Cuban people, all the while trading and talking to China with a far worse human rights record, where no free elections exist either. The fossil here is American foreign policy
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- Here is a deal for Cuba. Free elections in Cuba equals free trade. It has been half a century since Castro promised free elections. It is time that the fossil kept his word.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




