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  • 16
    Nov
    2012
    6:43pm, EST

    Cuba's fishing industry sustainable in private sector

    Greg Kahn / Getty Images

    Fishermen cast nets for bait fish in the Almendares River before heading out to fish for the day near Havana, Cuba, Nov. 16, 2012. Despite Cuba's fisheries being at critically low levels according to the United Nations, fishermen are still catching enough to make a living.

    Greg Kahn / Getty Images

    Fishermen haul in a marlin at a dock in Havana, Cuba, Nov. 16.

    Greg Kahn / Getty Images

    A fisherman repairs his cast net at one of the local fishing docks in Havana, Cuba, Nov. 16.

    Greg Kahn / Getty Images

    Feral cats crowd a boat in hopes of receiving scraps from fishermen at a dock in Havana, Cuba, Nov. 16.

    Greg Kahn / Getty Images

    Fishermen help pull a boat into a landing at a local dock in Havana, Cuba, Nov. 16.

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    1 comment

    cuba going the way of the USA. The USA going the way of the soviet union and cuba

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    Explore related topics: business, cuba, americas, industry, fishing, communism
  • 12
    Nov
    2012
    7:49pm, EST

    Cuba evolves from its socialist past as private enterprise takes root

    All images by Greg Kahn / Getty Images

    A new independently-owned store sells shirts and jewelry to shoppers in Havana, Cuba, Nov. 12, 2012.

    Greg Kahn, Getty Images — New business regulations in the communist country have allowed thousands of citizens to make money for themselves for the first time since 1959.

    See more images related to Cuba on PhotoBlog

    A market sells dresses and other items in Havana, Cuba, Nov. 12.

    A man works at his shoe repair shop, in the doorway of his home, in Havana, Cuba, Nov. 12.

    Customers try on watches and jewelry in Havana, Cuba, Nov. 12.

    Related Articles:

    • Cuba to try letting workers run state restaurants
    • Lighter restrictions will enable locals to travel to Cuba
    • Stagnant US exports to Cuba belie fair’s optimism

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    2 comments

    "Cuba evolves from its socialist past..." News Flash: Cuba is COMMUNIST!

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  • 27
    Sep
    2012
    9:37am, EDT

    Communist ideals still strong in China's Nanjie village

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    Residents rest near portraits of the Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin and dictator Joseph Stalin at Dong Fang Hong Square in Nanjie village of Luohe city in China's central Henan province.

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    Residents push lawn mowers on a street in Nanjie village of Luohe city in China's central Henan province.

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    A student from an art school practices next to a poster with a portrait of the late Chairman Mao Zedong and characters of Chinese revolutionary drama in Nanjie village of Luohe city in China's central Henan province.

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    A worker cleans near a poster of the late Chairman Mao Zedong at a thermal power plant of the Nanjie Cun Group in Nanjie village. Mao is still highly revered in Nanjie, enjoying a god-like status.

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    A local resident on the balcony of her welfare house at a community in Nanjie village.

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    A girl next to a portrait of the late Chairman Mao Zedong at a souvenir shop beside Dong Fang Hong Square in Nanjie village.

    Jason Lee / Reuters

    A local resident shows his meal tickets as he receives steamed bread in Nanjie village.

    Reuters reports: Nanjie village of Luohe city in China's central Henan province, with more than 3,100 residents, is touted to be one of the remaining models of communist China, where the principles of morality and collectivism of the late Chairman Mao still strictly guide the people's daily lives.

    Aside from free housing, healthcare, food rations and education, locals working in the village's factories receive an average salary of 2500 yuan, about 400 dollars. The village's return to communism came at the same time as the rest of the country opened up to the capitalist market in the mid 1980s. 

    Beijing-based Reuters photographer Jason Lee created these images on Sept. 24 and made them available to NBC News today.

    • China slowdown adds urgency to Communist Party soul searching
    • China's 'wonderful' communist village

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    14 comments

    Some people just have that worker bee mentality. The STATE will provide all. PS: Don't get off on some Obama tangent. The US is nothing like communist China and never will be regardless of who is President. Even "Communist" China is not like Mao's communist China.

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    Explore related topics: china, world-news, communism, featured, luohe
  • 16
    Jul
    2012
    9:18am, EDT

    Pull up a landmine, have a drink in former communist leader's HQ

    David Gray / Reuters

    A room decorated with military maps and old propaganda posters in a cave that was once the headquarters of former Chinese Communist military leader Lin Biao, located in mountains on the outskirts of Beijing July 16.

    David Gray / Reuters

    A gas mask hangs next to a poster of former Chinese Chairman Mao Zedong in a cave that was once the headquarters of former Chinese Communist military leader Lin Biao, July 16.

    David Gray / Reuters

    Grenades and a tank mine sit atop ordnance boxes in a cave that was once the headquarters of former Chinese Communist military leader Lin Biao, July 16.

    David Gray / Reuters

    Old parachutes hang above tables in a cave that was once the headquarters of former Chinese Communist military leader Lin Biao,

    David Gray / Reuters

    The entrance to a cave, shaped in the form of an aeroplane, can be seen under a mountain that was once the headquarters of former Chinese Communist military leader Lin Biao located on the outskirts of Beijing July 16.

    Reuters reports: A cave that was once the headquarters of former Chinese Communist military leader Lin Biao, has been turned into a ‘Military Bar’ using old military ordnance as furniture including sandbags, helmets, artillery shells and land mines. Marshal Lin Biao used the cave as his military headquarters in 1968 shortly before he died in a plane crash in Mongolia, following what appeared to be a failed coup to oust Chairman Mao. Shortly after his death, he was officially condemned as a traitor by the Communist Party of China.  The cave, located in mountains on the outskirts of Beijing, has an entrance in the form of airplane.  If you're one of the few to make the trip to see it, bring a jacket as the cave is cold inside.  

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: travel, china, military, beijing, world-news, bar, communism, mao
  • 28
    Jun
    2012
    3:05pm, EDT

    Seeing where communism lives in the 21st century

    There was a time in the 20th century when the word "communism" got the same airplay as "terrorism" does now. Though it's no longer the focus of fear, communism didn't die out entirely at the end of the Cold War. It persists in a few states around the world, explored by photographer Tomas van Houtryve in his new book Behind the Curtains.

    Tomas van Houtryve / VII

    2009: An all girls group of Young Communist League members walks past a statue of Chairman Mao Zedong in front of the Yan'an Revolutionary Memorial Hall in Yan'an.

    Van Houtryve dealt with hair-raising circumstances in his quest: trekking in Nepal below military helicopters to find Maoists, impersonating a businessman to gain access to North Korea, and hiking deep into Laotian jungle to find hiding US-allied Hmong refugees left over from the Vietnam War.

    That last mission led to a heartbreaking meeting:

    Upon seeing us, some of the adults broke down in tears. They claimed not to have seen an American since the CIA pulled out of Laos more than three decades earlier.

    Having traveled to several war zones and natural disasters, I had never seen such a ragged and desperate group of people. It took a while before they were calm enough to explain their situation to us and submit to Thomas’ interviews. Five men came forward saying that they were CIA-trained veterans of the Secret War. They pulled forward family members to show their bullet and shrapnel scars from attacks by the Lao People’s Army.

    “If I surrender, I will be punished,” explained Xang Yang. “They will never forgive me,” he said of the Communist government. “I can not live outside the jungle because I am a former American soldier.”

    Tomas van Houtryve / VII

    2007: Relatives of veterans of the CIA Secret War break down in tears at their hidden village in the Vientiane province.

    Tomas van Houtryve / VII

    2006: People buy bread in a bakery in Havana.

    Tomas van Houtryve / VII

    2009: Papers fall out of the windows of the Parliament building while rioters ransack the inside in Chisinau, Moldova. Opposition leaders accused the Communists of rigging the recent elections and demanded a recount.

    In Nepal, van Houtryve hiked for days in the Himalaya to reach a Maoist-controlled area. Upon meeting a local militia group, he observed:

    The soldiers were much younger than I expected. Our minders had claimed that all fighters were over 18, but when Alex spoke to the battalion’s vice political commissar, he had a different reply. “According to Lenin, once they are 15, they can join the army.”

    Many were girls. One wearing a Britney Spears t-shirt caught my eye. I also spotted Spiderman, Jurassic Park and several Harley Davidson designs in the crowd. How had Britney’s image penetrated this remote area while the news of communism’s global collapse apparently had not?

    Tomas van Houtryve / VII

    2005: A Maoist rebel soldier wearing a Britney Spears t-shirt stands among a batallion of other soldiers of the People's Liberation Army, First Brigade, Mid Division during a drill in a schoolyard in the village of Gairigaon, Nepal.

    Book cover, Tomas van Houtryve's "Behind the Curtains."

    You can buy the book at the VII Photo Agency's store.  View an exhibit in New York and meet Tomas at a book signing in San Francisco.

    See more images in PhotoBlog from:

    • China
    • Cuba
    • Laos
    • North Korea
    • Moldova
    • Vietnam

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: china, cuba, nepal, north-korea, world-news, communism, moldova, tomas-van-houtryve
  • 4
    May
    2012
    6:49pm, EDT

    Russian newspaper Pravda (Truth) celebrates its 100th anniversary

    Sergei Ilnitsky / EPA

    Spekhov Yevgeny, editor of correspondence department, shows an issue of paper 'Pravda' from 10 May 1945 after the capitulation of Nazi Germany in the editorial office of Russian Communist party newspaper 'Pravda' (Truth) in Moscow, Russia on Friday. Russian celebrate 100 year anniversary of the first issue of the newspaper 'Pravda' which was published on 05 May 1912 in St. Petersburg, becoming the biggest newspaper during the Soviet period of the Russian history and the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party from 1912 until 1991 when the paper was closed down after the decree of the President Boris Yeltsin. In 1997 Russian communists recovered 'Pravda' as an official paper of the Russian Communist party.

    Sergei Ilnitsky / EPA

    A journalist works near the memorial working place (R) of the wife of Vladimir Lenin Nadezhda Krupskaya in the editorial office of Russian Communist party newspaper 'Pravda' (Truth) in Moscow.

    Sergei Ilnitsky / EPA

    Pre-anniversary issues of paper 'Pravda' (Truth) are pictured while on the production line at the printing works outside Moscow.

    Sergei Karpukhin / Reuters

    Boris Komotsky, editor of Pravda newspaper, works at his desk in an office, with an image of Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin seen in the background, at Moscow.

    Reuters reports that the 100-year-old Russian newspaper is still 'urging the workers of the world to unite':

    Times are hard. But its editor says that battling hostile authorities, the threat of closure and financial problems is how Pravda spent its early years after first appearing in St Petersburg on May 5, 1912, until the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.

    "In many respects our role and purpose has gone back to what it was before 1917," Boris Komotsky said in his office in Moscow's Pravda Street, a huge photograph of Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin reading Pravda on the wall behind him.

    "We are the opposition's main organ, fighting for power, for policy changes. We've gone though so many problems. Now each of the workers here is a hero. At times they've had to work without getting a paycheck."

    There's a newspaper in America with the same name - in English. The Elkhart Truth, in northern Indiana, worked together with msnbc.com to produce the Elkhart Project, a yearlong series of reports about a region hit particularly hard by the recent recession.

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    I remember I was reading PRAVDA with my grandfather, when I was a kid. He was blind, so he asked me to read it to him.

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  • 1
    Feb
    2012
    7:53am, EST

    Dimitar Dilkoff / AFP - Getty Images

    An elderly woman lights a candle on the monument listing the names of the victims of Bulgaria's communist regime during an open air mass in central Sofia on Feb. 1, 2012.

    Bulgaria remembers victims of communist regime

    Agence France Presse reports:

    Bulgaria observed for the first time a day of remembrance for the victims of the country's 45-year communist regime on the anniversary of the first killings on February 1, 1945.

    Between December 1944 and April 1945, the self-proclaimed People's Court set up by the newly established communist regime ordered the killing of a total of 2,730 Bulgarians.

    1 comment

    A part-Bulgarian/Native American former soldier from Fallujah told me that while growing up in Brooklyn, he felt like he was black as the rest.

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    Explore related topics: human-rights, europe, world-news, bulgaria, communism
  • 12
    Jan
    2012
    5:19pm, EST

    Mercedes apologizes for using Che Guevara image

    Daimler AG

    Dieter Zetsche, head of the Mercedes-Benz unit of Daimler AG, revealed the controversial ad during a presentation Tuesday at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    Updated at 8:30 p.m. ET: Daimler AG apologized Thursday for using an image of Marxist revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara during a promotional presentation for Mercedes-Benz cars.

    Follow @MAlexJohnson

    The image briefly appeared Tuesday during a presentation by Dieter Zetsche, head of Daimler's Mercedes unit, at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. It reproduced a famous Alberto Korda photo of Guevara, the Argentine communist who spearheaded the revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power in Cuba. The photo became a symbol of communist revolutionary movements during the 1960s and '70s. 

    But in place of the star that adorns Guevara's beret in the original, Mercedes affixed its corporate logo.

    Activists reacted with horror to the appropriation of Guevara, whom many political conservatives and Cuban-Americans consider a mass murderer who helped subjugate Cuba.


    "Mercedes-Benz Uses Communist Madman Che Guevara to Sell Luxury Cars," said the headline on a blog post from the Heritage Foundation, a prominent conservative political organization in Washington.

    "Che Guevara, not to put too fine a point on it, was a psychopath whose sadistic lust for blood was not easily quenched. He killed for pleasure," said the post, written by Heritage Vice President Mike Gonzalez.

    In a statement Thursday to msnbc.com, Daimler said the image was just "one of many images and videos in the presentation," which it said was intended to represent "the revolution in automobility enabled by new technologies, in particular those associated with connectivity."

    "Daimler was not condoning the life or actions of this historical figure or the political philosophy he espoused," the company said, adding: "We sincerely apologize to those who took offense."

    Daimler's statement was welcomed by Ernesto Suarez, who organized an online petition calling for Mercedes-Benz to apologize for using the image of a man the petition called "a racist, homophobic, anti-semitic and tyrannical killer who admitted in his own writing to his endless blood thirst."

    "I'm very satisfied with the reaction from Mercedes-Benz," Suarez, a Cuban-American who lives in Kansas City, Mo., told msnbc.com Thursday evening. "I believe that they have done the right thing.

    "The victory, if there is one, is not mine, but belongs to the descendants of [Guevara's] victims [and] the survivors, to common sense and to civility," he said.

    Here's Daimler's full statement to msnbc.com:

    In his keynote speech at CES, Dr. Zetsche addressed the revolution in automobility enabled by new technologies, in particular those associated with connectivity. To illustrate this point, the company briefly used a photo of revolutionary Che Guevara (it was one of many images and videos in the presentation). Daimler was not condoning the life or actions of this historical figure or the political philosophy he espoused. We sincerely apologize to those who took offense.

    716 comments

    Genius. Let's use a well known, controversial figure from contemporary world history to sell our product. Since we're selling high-end, luxury automobiles, let's use an iconic symbol of the communist movement in Latin America. I guess Che Guevera never thought to copyright his own name and image.

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    Explore related topics: autos, advertising, che-guevara, mercedes-benz, communism, ces, featured
  • 10
    May
    2011
    6:51am, EDT

    Elections in India's communist bastion

    Rupak De Chowdhuri / Reuters

    A woman holds up her ink-stained finger after casting her vote outside a polling station during the sixth and final phase of voting in Lalgarh village in West Midnapore district in the eastern Indian state of West Bengal on May 10. The results for the month-long staggered election of the state will be known on May 13.

    As we reported last month, elections in the Indian state of West Bengal could see a populist maverick unseat the world longest-serving, democratically elected communist government.

    Piyal Adhikary / EPA

    An elderly woman waits on the gate of her home next to a wall painted with symbols and slogans of the ruling Left Communist party of Bengal in Mukundapur village 35km east of Kolkata, on 22 March.

    After 34 years of communist rule, federal Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee, a firebrand orator known as "Didi" or "elder sister," looks set to overthrow the communists blamed for leaving West Bengal and its capital Kolkata in a time-warp of Soviet era state control.

    Bikas Das / AP

    Indian Railway Minister and leader of the Trinamool Congress party Mamata Banerjee waits for the arrival of Indian Prime Minister and Congress party leader Manmohan Singh during an election campaign in Kolkata on April 23. The Congress party and Trinamool Congress party are allies in the ongoing six-phased elections for the state of West Bengal.

    The results are expected to be announced on Friday. Tripti Lahiri of the Wall Street Journal blogged today on what a victory for Ms. Banerjee might mean for the state.

    Comment

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  • 10
    Dec
    2010
    2:09pm, EST

    Vadim Ghirda / AP

    A bird is seen behind barbed wire fences in Fort 13 of the Jilava jail in Jilava, Romania, Friday, Dec. 10, 2010. Dozens of former political prisoners gathered on Human Rights Day to commemorate the anti-communist fighters, parachuted by United States air force planes in the 1950s to organize a resistance movement, who were detained and executed in 1953 at the Jilava jail.

    Former political prisoners gather to honor those who helped

    By Meredith Birkett

    The graphic shapes and lines of this photo caught my eye.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: human, rights, day, communism

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M. Alex Johnson

M. Alex Johnson is a reporter for NBC News specializing in national affairs, technology and data analysis. He joined NBC News in 1999 from The Washington Post.

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Meredith Birkett is a senior multimedia editor for special projects at MSNBC.com. In this role, Meredith works with freelancers, picture agencies, and staff multimedia journalists to produce multimedia projects across all sections of MSNBC.com.

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