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Havana Times

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Havana Times
TypeOnline magazine
FormatWebsite
EditorCircles Robinson
Founded2008
LanguageEnglish, Spanish
HeadquartersManagua, Nicaragua
Websitewww.havanatimes.org

Havana Times is a Cuban Digital Newspaper[1] and online magazine founded in 2008. The online publication is edited in Nicaragua. Most of its contributors live in Havana, Santiago de Cuba and Guantánamo. There are also Cuban contributors in Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, Canada, Ecuador and Mexico and volunteer translators in the Netherlands, the United States and the United Kingdom.[citation needed]

Overview

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The project began as early as 2007,[2] and the magazine was launched 2008 in Cuba, with Circles Robinson as editor. Robinson, a US native, moved to Cuba in 2001. He worked as a translator for ESTI, Cuba's official translation agency, but left Cuba after his work contract was not renewed in 2009, a fact that he associates with his role in Havana Times. As of 2009, Robinson edits the magazine from Nicaragua and makes occasional trips to Cuba to meet with contributors, who, he says, have suffered harassment and threats from Cuban authorities in several occasions.[3][time needed]

Havana Times is published online in Spanish and English with no print version.[citation needed]

The Weekly Worker described the Havana Times as a "Cuban news and opinions website that neither consists of sycophantic Castro apologetics nor of its mirror image - the rabid anti-communism peddled by Florida-based Cuban exiles".[4]

The Havana Times cooperates with the Nicaraguan weekly newspaper Confidencial, of which Circles Robinson is a columnist.[5][6][7]

References

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  1. ^ Max Fisher (29 Oct 2012). "As Hurricane Sandy devastates Cuba, bloggers rise to the challenge". Washington Post.
  2. ^ "Havana Times' 4th birthday" (in Spanish). HavanaTimes.org. 28 Nov 2011.
  3. ^ Interview with Havana Times editor Circles Robinson, 2020-08-04, "Some of them [the contributors] get constantly harassed by State security, and threatened, either by veiled threats or direct threats
  4. ^ Zurowski, Maciej (13 January 2011). "More glasnost, less perestroika". weeklyworker.co.uk. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  5. ^ "Havana Times". Confidencial (in Spanish).
  6. ^ "Sergio Ramirez on Nicaragua and Dictatorships". Havana Times. 2022-07-06.
  7. ^ "Circles Robinson". Confidencial (in Spanish).
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