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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEntertainment | September 2009 

Cubans Flock to Iconic Plaza for 'Peace Concert'
email this pageprint this pageemail usPaul Haven - Associated Press
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September 20, 2009



Colombia's singer Juanes rehearses at the site that will host the upcoming "Peace Without Borders" concert in Havana, Saturday, Sept. 19, 2009. The concert, organized by Juanes, will take place on Sept. 20. (AP/Javier Galeano)
Havana — Cubans in their multitudes flocked to sprawling Revolution Plaza on Sunday for a massive open-air "peace concert" headlined by Colombian rocker Juanes, an event criticized by some Cuban-Americans who say the performers are lending support to the island's communist government simply by showing up.

Organizers say they expect as many as half a million people to attend the four-hour concert under a broiling Havana sun. Even half that many would make the Colombian heartthrob's visit the biggest by an outsider since Pope John Paul II's 1998 tour.

Thousands of Cuban partygoers stood along Havana's seaside Malecon boulevard before dawn Sunday, drinking, singing and staring out at the moonlit sea. Nearly all said they planned to attend.

"I am singing to the Cubans, I am singing for you, Juanes," crooned Elide Ramirez, a Juanes fan, as he strummed on a guitar just after 5 a.m. "Here are the Cubans, waiting for you like brothers."

And outside Revolution Plaza, many ignored government warnings not to turn up until noon.

"We've been here since three in the morning waiting for everyone, waiting for Juanes and for (Puerto Rican singer) Olga Tanon," said Luisa Maria Canales, an 18-year-old engineering student. "I'm a little tired, but I am more excited."

That excitement does not extend to some across the Florida Straits, where Juanes has endured death threats, CD smashing protests and boycotts since his decision to hold the "Peace Without Borders" concert in Havana.

Police in Key Biscayne, Florida, say they are keeping watch over the homes of both the rocker and his manager, Fernan Martinez Maecha.

Still, the criticism from Florida is far from universal. Spanish-language stations are gearing up for coverage, and several exile groups have voiced support, describing the event as a rare chance for Cubans to get a glimpse of the outside world.

Some Cuban officials have used the event as an opportunity to deride U.S. foreign policy toward Cuba, and the 47-year trade embargo in particular. But Juanes has insisted the concert is about music, not politics.

"It is one more grain of sand for improving relations through art," the singer said upon arriving in Havana late Friday.

Of the threats from Miami, he said only: "It is a city that I love."

Juanes met recently with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and the concert even prompted comment from President Barack Obama, who told the Spanish-language Univision network that the event probably wouldn't have much effect on U.S.-Cuban relations.

"My understanding is that he's a terrific musician. He puts on a very good concert," Obama said in the interview broadcast Sunday. "I certainly don't think it hurts U.S./Cuban relations. These kinds of cultural exchanges – I wouldn't overstate the degree that it helps."

In addition to Juanes and Tanon, the concert features Cuban folk legend Silvio Rodriguez and salsa stars Los Van Van, as well as performers from Spain, Ecuador, Italy and elsewhere.

The festivities are expected to get under way at about 2 p.m. at iconic Revolution Plaza, which features a giant likeness of revolutionary icon Ernesto "Che" Guevara and the heavily guarded offices of Fidel and Raul Castro. Temperatures are forecast to rise into the 90s (30s), with Havana's dripping humidity piled on top. The government has urged concertgoers to bring food and plenty of water, and to take precautions against the sun.

Juanes, who has won 17 Latin Grammy awards, more than any other artist, is known for his social activism. His first "Peace Without Borders" concert in March 2008 drew tens of thousands to the border between Venezuela and Colombia when tensions were high over a Colombian commando raid into neighboring Ecuador that killed a leading rebel commander.



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