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		 Cuba 
		not returning to capitalism despite U.S. deal: Castro's daughter 
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		[December 20, 2014] 
		By Rosa Tania Valdés
 HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuba will defend its 
		socialist principles and will not return to capitalism just because it 
		has agreed a detente with the United States, the daughter of President 
		Raul Castro said, dispelling any notion that U.S. companies would be 
		free to roll into Cuba.
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			 "The people of Cuba don't want to return to capitalism," Mariela 
			Castro, a member of parliament, told Reuters on Friday. 
 Cuba and the United States on Wednesday agreed to end more than five 
			decades of animosity and re-establish full diplomatic relations. 
			U.S. President Barack Obama also said he intends to remove some 
			sanctions against Cuba and work with the U.S. Congress to end the 
			economic embargo.
 
 But even if all U.S. barriers to Cuba were lifted, any U.S. 
			companies would still need permission from Cuba's communist 
			government to do business on the Caribbean island.
 
			
			 "We've been at this 56 years and ... we love saying that we are a 
			country in revolution, trying to create socialism, and we form part 
			of a single party called the Communist Party," Mariela Castro said.
 Under Cuba's foreign investment law, overseas companies are welcome 
			but need to negotiate agreements with Cuban state companies or the 
			government to do business.
 
 Cuba almost always demands a controlling stake, which has 
			discouraged some companies from elsewhere in the world from 
			investing.
 
 Imports to Cuba are administered by state holding companies, meaning 
			that U.S. companies would not be able to simply find a buyer and 
			ship goods in.
 
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			"Sometimes people say Fidel is hard-headed, that the Cuban leaders 
			are hard-headed, but experience has taught us something important, 
			that we should never give in on our principles," Castro said outside 
			parliament during a break in Friday's session.
 (Reporting by Rosa Tania Valdés; Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing 
			by Kieran Murray)
 
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