Sunday, April 8, 2012

The Oil that Bleeds Cubans Dry

The Oil that Bleeds Cubans Dry
April 7, 2012
By Amrit

Cooking oil costs about $2.70 usd a liter in Cuba where the average
salary is around $20 a month.

HAVANA TIMES, April 7 — Whenever I'm forced to come to grips with our
waning cooking-oil ration (even though I pour it in a bottle whose
eyedropper cap allows me to manage it carefully), I think back to an
incident that I experienced years ago with a tourist from Curacao, a
friend of the family.

While visiting the apartment he was renting in the Pan American Village,
our friend insisted on cooking up a vegetable stew for all of us.

As he was preparing the dish, he discovered he had put in too much oil,
so he tipped the bowl over the sink to drain off the excess.

Everyone present (Cubans, of course) jumped out of their seats in
unison, converged on him to halt this sacrilegious act, and shouted in
concert "Noooo!"

The stranger stood motionless almost in shock, and — suddenly
understanding — he whispered, "Oh…sorry."

Though we all laughed following our spontaneous and well-synchronized
reaction (which was quite symbolic), whenever I recall that incident, my
smile makes me freeze and I wonder whether such anxiety is really worth
that "precious liquid," whose price increases erratically in the market
– along with the complicity of our silence and our disapproving murmurs.

A bottle of cooking oil that used to be purchased for less than 2.00
CUCs has increased to 2.40 ($2.70 USD). Similarly, small bag of oil
(which was the solution when you only had 1.00 CUC), cost 1.15 less than
a month ago, and a few days back I had to pay to 1.20 CUC!

Many people, in a display of laziness (or hypocrisy) might say, "Who
cares? It's only five cents more." They pretend they don't notice how a
simple kitchen ingredient, slowly and quietly, is occupying more and
more space in our pockets, in our physical efforts and mental labor, in
our daily doses of uncertainty.

What is the fair price of oil in Cuban stores?

I've heard rumors that in some stores reserved only for members of
MININT [the Ministry of Interior], oil is sold in Cuban pesos and at a
reasonable price. I hate to be imprecise, so therefore I'm not giving
the details, but I wonder if it's true.

A former neighbor and friend who worked in an office that operated under
the business holdings of FAR [the Revolutionary Armed Forces] told me
that they would give him two bottles of oil a month, in addition to
other "small perks," which made his opinion about the situation of the
country more forgiving.

One day, an honest criticism that he made in front of a supervisor
placed him in such a tenuous position that he was forced to ask to
resign from the company.

His letters of protest addressed to those "higher up" proved futile.
Co-workers who would wish him well in the street, felt compelled not to
be on his side in a decisive meeting (for fear of losing their monthly
bottles of oil and the small perks?)

Unemployed and frustrated, his vision of Cuba became so critical that he
ended going to the United States.

Today, all I can do is recall his confession about how, when he had
plenty of oil, he didn't think about what that cooking supply
represented to the average household.

One bottle is nearly twenty percent of the average monthly wage here,
assuming you only buy one per month, in addition to the meager ration we
get from the ration book, which are both threatened to disappear.

This same friend once told my husband that the real cost to the Cuban
government of stocking a bottle of oil in one of its stores is about .70
CUC.

Outraged, my husband asked for clarification on this point with our
local People's Power delegate at the representative's regular
report-back meeting. The delegate, who chided my husband for not having
asked the question "on the side," claimed that he didn't have a response
right then but that he would answer the question at the next meeting.

But that next meeting was cut short when the delegate flew off the
handle when pressed to finally answer the question (this time posed by
my former neighbor, who now lives in Miami). Feeling completely beside
himself, our representative ended up shouting, "You're committing
counter-revolution!"

The people there tried to calm the delegate and the meeting was
dissolved. Still, my husband was left without his response and a while
later that same representative died in an accident.

The delegate who replaced him has been very troubled by complaints made
by several residents who are demanding responses to issues that seem
even more serious – responses that have still yet to come…

Therefore, the question about something as simple as cooking oil, (no
matter how much it winds up draining our energy), hasn't even made an
echo with my neighbors, and appears doubly doomed to uncertainty.

http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=66701

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