
Cuba's new President Raul Castro is to lift a ban on a wide range of consumer electrical appliances.
Cubans will be allowed for the first time to own DVD players and computers, according to an internal government memo leaked to Reuters news agency.
Curbs may also be lifted on video machines, electric pressure and rice cookers, microwaves and car alarms, as well as 19-inch and 24-inch TV sets.
A top government official has confirmed that such plans were being adopted.
But it is thought air conditioners will not be available until 2009 and toasters until the year after due to limited power supplies.
The sale of many electric appliances was banned in the 1990s, when the collapse of the Soviet Union led to a severe energy crisis.
Cuba resolved power cuts in 2006 by importing hundreds of electricity generators run on fuel supplied by Venezuela, its new anti-American oil rich ally.
Until now, only foreigners and companies have been able to buy computers in Cuba, while DVD players were seized at the airport until last year, when customs rules were eased.
In his inaugural speech, after being formally chosen as president last month, Raul Castro promised to ease some of the restrictions on daily life in a matter of weeks.
Although it appears his first move will be improved access to imported consumer goods, so far there is no word on easing curbs on internet access or legalising communications equipment, such as mobile phones.
The_Walrus
Pro 
Once they do get all that stuff, we won't be getting any more of that wonderful Cuban music. Buena Vista Social Club isd just the tip of the iceberg...