Peace without borders: Juanes in Havana: A crazy war on stage

Some reactions in Miami to the Colombian singer Juanes publicized concert in Havana, next September, seem to revive the era of the most accentuated MacCarthysm.

As if we were in the late 50s, when GOP Senator from Wisconsin, Joseph McCarthy, promoted incriminations, gossips and black lists against people suspicious of being communist, now the so called "voices of the Cuban exile", some show and music managers and TV and radio presentators question Juanes for what he wants: to play one of his Peace concerts in a communist country. Some have even called for boycotting his records sales in Florida.

Cultural thaw at a glance?

American rapper Lumidee was recently in Cuba to shoot a video with Iranian-born signer Arash Labaf. Colombian rocker Juanes is organizing a new festival for late September in Havana, when he wants to hold his second "Peace Without Borders" concert with a number of US musicians. According to sources, Juanes "has met with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in hopes that American musicians can join the extravaganza." The long-awaited cultural thaw is yet to come.

Cuban Cyclist Wins PanAm Gold

Mexico: Cuban cyclist Yumary Gonzalez won another gold medal in the Pan-American Cycling Championship, currently held in this country until July 30.

Yumary, who won on Tuesday the 6-mile scratch race, in which she holds the world record, showed her superiority over US racer Cari Higgings and Chilean Paola Munoz, who reached the second and third positions in that category.

Listen to Changui de Guantanamo on BBC radio programme World Routes

In the year of the 50th anniversary of the Cuban revolution, BBC Radio programme World Routes features a specially recorded studio session by Cuban five-piece Changui de Guantanamo. Presenter Lucy Duran first encountered this group on the road as part of her World Routes report from Cuba in June 2007.

Changui is an old style from the Eastern Guantanamo province dating back to the 19th century and combining elements of Spanish guitar and African traditions. The songs are played on instruments such as the marimbula thumb piano, the tres (a kind of three-stringed guitar), and an array of percussion including the guiro, maracas and bongos.

40,000 people join the Cuba 50 celebrations

More than 40,000 people attended the Cuba50 festival events in June at London's Barbican Centre, 27 & 28 June , Gillett Square in Hackney 27 June, Hackney Empire 25 June and Victoria Park 21 June . They were privileged to see Cuba's finest acts including Pablo Milanés, Harold Lopez Nussa and Son del Tropico, Yoruba Andabo and Oscar d'Leon, Changui de Guantanamo, Orquesta Aragon, Kumar, Osvaldo Chacon, Tumbao Tivoli, Omar Puente, London Lucumi Choir, Charanga del Norte and lots more.

"This Is a Wonderful Festival of Equality" – Mariela Castro on Gay Pride in London

LONDON, July 4, 2009 ─ More that a million people were in London for the annual gay pride parade this afternoon, police estimated. And pride chair Paul Birrell thought that up to 100,000 took part in the parade.

Sarah Brown, the wife of Prime Minister Gordon Brown was among those on the parade which passed along some of the iconic London streets.

Cuba50 in all its glory at Victoria Park

Welcome to Paradise read the banner over Hackney's Paradise Gardens, ­ and for aficionados of Cuban music it was. The inaugural event in the Barbican's Dance Nations series kicked off with cha-cha-cha lessons in the Spiegel Tent, then went outside to strut its stuff.

Three bands, old and new: Leeds-based Charanga del Norte were an ensemble of Latin-loving northerners that included a cellist from the Liverpool Philharmonic. Their blend of European classical music and African rhythms sparkled in the afternoon sunshine, buoyed by founder Sue Miller's ubiquitous flute.