Cuba to Launch Broadband Home Internet Project in Havana

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02 February 2016 4:43pm
Cuba to Launch Broadband Home Internet Project in Havana

Cuba has announced it will launch residential broadband internet services in two areas of its capital, Havana.

The government has also said it will allow cafes, bars and restaurants to order broadband service.

Cuba's state telecom agency ETECSA said the pilot project would allow residents in the historic district of Old Havana to order broadband through fiber-optic connections operated by the Chinese telecom firm Huawei. No timeline or prices have been announced.

Some Cuban citizens have dial-up home services or restricted mobile phone connections that allow access only to state-run email. The public can access the internet in public Wi-Fi hotspots in Cuba, which opened last year.

There are 58 wireless internet points in Cuba, 17 of them in Havana. Around 150,000 Cubans used those hotspots daily in 2015, according to ETECSA data.

Odalys Rodriguez del Toro, ETECSA director for Havana, has also announced that 30 more public Wi-Fi hotspots will be opened in the capital in 2016, doubling the number of access points.

The United States has been pushing Cuba to show that it is improving conditions for its citizens as the two countries normalize their relations after more than 50 years of hostility.

US President Barack Obama is expected to travel to Cuba later this year to celebrate the re-establishment of diplomatic relations.
 

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