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Cuban-Americans taking part in today's 'general strike' in Miami
Employees at R.A Investment in Hialeah, Fla. were given the day off to join the work stoppage called by Cuban-American leaders to protest the federal goverment's removal of six-year-old Cuban rafter Elian Gonzalez from his Miami relatives's home early Saturday. (AP Photo)

Strike shuts down Little Havana, not rest of Miami

By Martha Irvine, Associated Press, 04/25/00

MIAMI - Workers stayed home, students skipped school and businesses closed Tuesday as Cuban-Americans called a general strike that shut down Little Havana but barely slowed the rest of the city.

 INDEX OF COVERAGE

Elian Gonzalez seized Elian Gonzalez, held by Donato Dalrymple, is taken by U.S. federal agents from his Miami relatives in a pre-dawn raid Saturday.
(AP Photo / Alan Diaz)

Chronology of events

 WHAT DO YOU THINK?

Do you approve or disapprove of the raid to seize Elian Gonzalez?
Approve
Disapprove

Abuzz
Should the relatives of Elian Gonzalez be allowed to visit the boy? Your view

 REALVIDEO

New England Cable News

04/25/00
Reno is grilled
'Sick-out' in Miami

04/23/00
Relatives demand a visit
Impact of the media
More demands for a visit



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 LATEST COVERAGE

APRIL 25
Elian moved
Work stoppage in Miami
Ball players sit out in protest

APRIL 24
Sense of loss in Little Havana
Father's case is stronger
Castro: US ties remain 'normal'

APRIL 23
Conspiracy over photos
Relatives decry 'brutality'
Fight over Elian continues
Easter calm in Little Havana
Elian, dad face legal battle
Picture captures the drama

APRIL 22
Federal agents seize Elian
Frustrated, Reno OKd force
Shock, anger in Miami
'He will need help'
Castro lauds the move
Gore, Bush reaction
Local reaction

APRIL 21
Cuban press for father
Amid rumors, concern
Elian saga rocks mayor

APRIL 19
Boston Archbishop speaks
Bernard Law Editorial

APRIL 18
Expert: Elian suffering

APRIL 14
Drama moves to the courts

APRIL 13
Miami prepares for showdown
Elian, in video: Let me stay

ARCHIVES
More stories from our archives

 ON THE WEB

The judge's decision
   (Adobe Acrobat file)

INS home page

Site launched by son of Miami relatives' spokesman

Cuban Communist Party newspaper, Granma

   

The protest over the Elian Gonzalez case brought honking cars and Cuban flags to the streets of Little Havana, where fires and violence broke out Saturday after armed federal agents grabbed the 6-year-old Cuban boy in a pre-dawn raid.

Except for a few coffee stands, the neighborhood's vibrant business community shut down on a hot, sunny day, while hundreds of protesters gathered on street corners or drove their cars in long, honking caravans through the streets.

"We are in mourning," said Angelo Gutierrez, 70. "I will buy nothing today."

The rest of the Miami metropolitan area went on with its day. Scattered businesses closed their doors and the morning traffic in the city was lighter than usual. The airport and Port of Miami suffered no difficulties, officials said.

Only two airport porters didn't show for work Tuesday, said supervisor Ileana Casasola. "I'm Cuban," she said. "I'd love to go support my people, but the problem is the airport is a busy place."

Many tourists didn't know of the strike. "They're causing more problems than they're solving," said Cleveland tourist Jackie Miller, breakfasting on South Beach. "Frankly, I'm a little tired of hearing about it."

Police said protests stayed peaceful, though they were watching for any problems. "We're hoping that ... this indeed is a day of reflection and contemplation and mourning as the Cuban exiles have called for," said Lt. Bill Schwartz.

Two people were arrested for disorderly conduct at one protest, Schwartz said.

Big businesses like American Airlines, which has 9,000 Miami-based employees, reported no staff shortages. At The Miami Herald, no reporters took the day off, though several support staff took vacation days at the paper and its Spanish-language daily, El Nuevo Herald, said Robin Reiter, vice president of human resources.

Larger corporations closed some operations -- seven Publix supermarkets shut their doors, and a McDonald's in Little Havana closed, leaving its flag at half-staff.

Even four Florida Marlins baseball players and several coaches said they would sit out Tuesday night's home game with San Francisco to honor the protest. Marlins manager John Boles said they would be excused with pay. The team closed its downtown merchandise store for the day.

Scattered effects of the strike could be felt throughout the county. The predominantly Hispanic city of Sweetwater kept going on a skeleton staff of mostly department heads, said Mayor Jose "Pepe" Diaz.

"We have to keep the city open for the public, but I do believe in the cause and I do stand with them," Diaz said.

However, in Hialeah, a city with a big Cuban population, the shopping district bustled.

In Little Havana, one impromptu street protest grew to 300 by midday. A caravan of cars numbered at least 100. Spanish-language radio announced the names of businesses that closed and those that stayed open.

School officials said they had no information on attendance by students of teachers. But bank teller Dora Irazarry, whose bank shut down, took her two boys out of school, and they said many other students did the same.

She brought them to the home of Elian's Miami relatives for the first time. The Cuban-American community held months of protests outside the house in hopes of keeping the boy here.

"This is horrible, horrible. I don't have words," she said. "It's important for them to see this. It's important for them to know what freedom is about."

Down the street at the closed Zagami's Market, a Cuban flag hung over the store sign. Below hung a handwritten sign that read: "Clinton a traitor. Shame on you."

--- On the Net: Miami-Dade County: http://www.co.miami-dade.fl.us Cuban American National Foundation: http://www.canfnet.org
 
 


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