A visit to Havana by a black president ending the US policy of isolation would be as magical as events of 50 years ago.
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/ 4 December 2006
The red tide sweeping through Latin America, checked in Peru and MexicoÂ, has achieved another memorable record this week in Ecuador. The substantial electoral victory of Rafael Correa, a clever, young, United States- educated economist and former finance minister, marks a further triumph for Hugo Chávez of Venezuela and his Bolivarian revolution, which has long sought to ignite Latin America’s "second independence".
At a petrol station outside the Cuban town of Cienfuegos, half a dozen teenage girls stand languidly by the pumps, jumping to attention when a car or lorry pulls up. They work the pumps efficiently, take payment and enter the transaction on to a large official form. They are dressed neatly in T-shirts and jeans and a slogan across their backs proclaims their identity as <i>trabajadores sociales</i>, or social workers. They are Fidel Castro’s latest army of guerrillas.
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/ 23 December 2005
The large vote for Evo Morales, the socialist and indigenous candidate in the presidential election in Bolivia, and the expected ratification of his success by the congress, marks a new and fascinating moment in the unrolling of radical politics in Latin America. Morales is a charismatic figure who represents important strands in Bolivia’s political traditions.