In this March 3, 2010, file photo, the monument of Venezuelan independence hero Francisco de Miranda is seen as waves splash on Malecon avenue in Havana. The foreigners visiting Havana used to be Canadians and Europeans on cheap beach package tours and left-leaning Americans on dutiful rounds of organic farms and neighborhood health clinics. Ten months after the U.S. and Cuba declared the end of a half-century of official hostility on 2015, the mood in Havana has changed. (Photo by Javier Galeano/AP Photo)
In this July 20, 2015, file photo, Javier Yanez looks out from his balcony where he hung a U.S., and a Cuban national flag, to celebrate the restored full diplomatic relations between Cuba and the Unites States, in Old Havana. The Cuban government has not announced any big deals with American companies since December 17. (Photo by Ramon Espinosa/AP Photo)
In this October 10, 2015 photo, businessman Ziad Chamoun, a Boston-area restaurant and club owner turned wine importer, swims with guide Hannah Berkeley as he spends the afternoon at a waterfront villa in Havana, Cuba, Saturday. "The next big bubble is going to be nightlife. That's what happened to Cancun," said Chamoun. After working as a freelance journalist and guide for clients, Berkeley now spends at least three weeks a month taking groups of moneyed Americans on rounds of Havana's clubs by night and crumbling housing stock in search of real-estate investment opportunities by day. (Photo by Desmond Boylan/AP Photo)
A soldier takes part in a wreath-laying ceremony attended by Italy's Prime Minister Matteo Renzi at Jose Marti Monument in Havana, Cuba October 28, 2015. (Photo by Enrique de la Osa/Reuters)
In this October 11, 2015 photo, a train wagon made to look like a bus, moves along the tracks on the outskirts of Trinidad, Cuba. This train, known as a "train auto motor", moves passengers to and from the outskirts of the city. (Photo by Ramon Espinosa/AP Photo)
A Look at Life in Cuba
http://avaxnews.net/fact/A_Look_at_Life_in_Cuba_Part_6.html
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