Los Angeles Times

Battening down for Obama

Havana braces for the president and some 1,200 journalist­s. Plus the Rolling Stones.

- By Kate Linthicum kate. linthicum @ latimes. com

HAVANA — Cuba is preparing for a Category 5 storm. Locals are calling it Hurricane Obama.

When President Obama touches down Sunday night in Havana — the first American leader to visit in nearly 90 years — he will find freshly paved streets and hotels that have been cleared of tourists to make room for his entourage.

Along with members of Congress, business leaders, and a major league baseball team, up to 1,200 journalist­s from around the world are descending on the Caribbean island, overwhelmi­ng off icials at the Cuban press center who still fashion media credential­s by hand.

Tourists who had reservatio­ns at the city’s top hotels were recently relocated — abruptly — to the beachside resort town of Varadero. Want a reservatio­n at one of Havana’s hot new restaurant­s or a seat at a bar? Good luck.

If the presidenti­al fervor weren’t enough stress on Cuba’s aging infrastruc­ture and relatively small tourism sector, consider the other minor events taking place here in coming days. Like a much- anticipate­d baseball game Tuesday featuring the Tampa Bay Rays, and a free concert Friday by Mick Jagger.

Cubans and visitors alike have been scrambling for tickets to see the Rays face off against an all- star Cuban team, a major event in this baseball- crazed country.

They won’t need tickets for the Rolling Stones show Friday night, but officials are worried about how many people might show up. Concert organizers, who added the show at the last minute as the surprise last stop on the band’s Latin America tour, are setting up massive screens outside the concert venue and have told some local organizers that they hope for a crowd of 1 million.

“Who came up with this idea?” joked Josue Lopez, a Cuban photograph­er who works with visiting film producers and journalist­s. Typically, Lopez has a single client at a time. This week he has eight.

He and others responsibl­e for ferrying around visitors are worried about logistics. There are rumors that several main thoroughfa­res will be shut down during Obama’s visit, which ends Tuesday. And much of Old Havana, a picturesqu­e district dominated by colonial architectu­re, may be blocked when Obama embarks on a walking tour of the area Sunday.

Most Cubans are greeting the occasion with excitement, saying the week’s events are more signs that this long- isolated island is finally being included in the rest of the world.

Outside Parque Central, a hotel that brought in several generators to help power the media center set up on the second f loor, taxi driver Jorge Perez offered passing journalist­s a discounted rate for a ride in his cherry red 1951 Chevy convertibl­e.

He disagreed with the characteri­zation of Obama’s visit as a storm.

“A hurricane is something that brings destructio­n,” Perez said. “This is such a big deal for us, politicall­y and economical­ly. It’s a moment filled with hope.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier
Los Angeles Times ?? STREET REPAIRS continue Friday in Old Havana, an area expected to be largely blocked off Sunday when President Obama takes a walking tour. Tourists have been moved out of central hotels.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times STREET REPAIRS continue Friday in Old Havana, an area expected to be largely blocked off Sunday when President Obama takes a walking tour. Tourists have been moved out of central hotels.

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