Times of Suriname

Cuba promotes foreign investment in special developmen­t zone

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HAVANA - Cuba’s Mariel Special Developmen­t Zone is now one of the main drivers of the economy and aims to attract half a billion US dollars in foreign investment each year, an official said. “Our goal is to grow. We are never going to give up our designated target of attracting 500 million US dollars a year, despite the hostile environmen­t,” the zone’s deputy director, Yanet Vazquez, told Havana-based news agency Prensa Latina, referring to stepped-up US sanctions, which now bar the arrival of cruise ships originatin­g from US ports, prevent fuel tankers from supplying the island, and limit the number of flights between Cuba and US cities. Located some 45 km west of the capital Havana, the special developmen­t zone opened seven years ago with 50 participat­ing enterprise­s, 27 of which are now in operation, representi­ng projects worth more than 2.5 billion dollars. Nine more firms are expected to begin operation in the coming months, including a cigarette factory from Cuban-Brazilian joint venture Brascuba and a Unilever Suchel plant that makes household goods. Chinese companies are among the foreign businesses that have invested in Mariel, especially in the biotechnol­ogy sector, producing glucometer­s, biosensors and other diagnostic devices. Cuba and China have agreed to jointly market and distribute Cubandevel­oped therapies in the Asian country, such as PPG, a sugarcane-derived natural drug to lower cholestero­l, and nutritiona­l supplement Prevenox. Within the framework of the Mariel Special Developmen­t Zone, the two countries have also agreed to produce and market a biotech cancer treatment and work on other innovation­s. In all, some 20 countries are participat­ing in Mariel, including Mexico, Germany and Vietnam.

(Xinhua)

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