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Culture > Cuba > Speak up agains...
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Speak up against totalitarian rule

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 30, 2008 at 12:48 PM

CUBA
Speak up against totalitarian rule
Posted on Wed, Apr. 30, 2008
By FRANK CALZON
www.cubacenter.org

In his book The Case for Democracy: The Power to Overcome Tyranny and 
Terror, Natan Sharansky, the former Israeli Cabinet member and one-time 
Soviet dissident, writes that three conditions must exist for people to 
break free of totalitarian rule: • People must want freedom enough to 
risk much of what they have to get it. • Other people in the world must 
believe that those who are seeking freedom deserve it and be willing to 
help them.

• Democratic nations must be willing to condition their foreign policies

to sup****t political reform in an oppressive country.

Developments in Germany and Cuba this week, attest to Sharanksy's wisdom 
on all three counts. In Cuba there was an episode reminiscent of Martin 
Luther King Jr.'s struggle for human rights. Ten Cuban women -- mothers, 
wives and daughters of political prisoners in Cuba and part of a group 
known as the Ladies in White -- gathered at a park to deliver a petition 
to the Interior Ministry seeking the release of their loved ones. Cuban 
government thugs set upon the women. A hundred police and security 
guards showed up, insulted the women, roughed them up and dragged away.

The incident touched Europeans. In 2005 the European Parliament awarded 
the Ladies in White the Sakharov Award for daring to assert their 
Freedom of Conscience.

Meanwhile, in Bonn a group of German human rights activists was 
picketing the Cuban government's consulate. The Frankfurt-based 
International Society for Human Rights sponsored the demonstration, 
which came on the eve of the organization's annual congress. The 
congress will focus on the abuse of human rights in Cuba, Tibet and 
several other countries with totalitarian governments.

So two of Sharansky's conditions are being met. What remains to be seen 
is whether the European nations, which will be meeting in Brussels in 
July to review their common Cuba positions, will muster the will to link 
their political, economic and cultural foreign policies to substantive 
reforms by the Castro brothers.

As the courageous Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci once wrote, ``There 
are times in life in which to remain silent is an error, and to speak up 
becomes an obligation.''

More and more men and women in the world seem willing to sup****t the 
legitimate democratic aspirations of people living in Cuba, Tibet, Burma 
and other totalitarian states and to speak out against the world's 
assassins and executioners.

Maybe that's because there hasn't been time enough for Germans to forget 
the suffering inflicted upon them by the East Germany STASSI and border 
guards who like Cuba's border guards shot to kill anyone trying to flee. 
Much the same can be said about those who fled communism in Poland, 
although there, after declaring martial law, Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski 
eventually resigned and opened the door to a rule of law and Solidarity.

Jaruzelski's decision was good not only for the Poles but also for 
himself. Unlike other dictators, he continues to live in his country. 
The point to emphasis here is that most of Eastern Europe remembers 
communism and willingly sup****ts democracy's advocates in Cuba. The 
Ladies in White and the ever-growing numbers of political prisoners in 
Cuba are constant reminders that the struggle for human rights is 
universal. The presence of the international media in that Havana park 
provided some protection to the Ladies in White.

Perhaps one day, like the Poles, Hungarians, Czechs, Spanish and other 
human rights activists, those who defend human rights in Cuba will 
obtain the freedom they seek and, then, lend sup****t to efforts to 
defend human rights and liberty elsewhere.

Having witnessed the iron fist of Raúl Castro come down on the Ladies in 
White, it would be tragic should Europeans suddenly turn silent instead. 
The communist military regime in Havana will not last forever. The Cuban 
people will remember those like José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero in Spain, 
who sup****t the Castro brothers' regime, as well as others like the 
demonstrators in Bonn, who embrace Europe's heritage of freedom and 
offer sup****t to Cubans in their time of need.

Frank Calzón is executive director of the Center for a Free Cuba in 
Wa****ngton, D.C.

http://www.miamiherald.com/851/story/514901.html
 




 3 Posts in Topic:
Speak up against totalitarian rule
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-30 12:48:21 
Re: Speak up against totalitarian rule
Fred <fred@[EMAIL PROT  2008-04-30 15:57:35 
Re: Speak up against totalitarian rule
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-30 23:21:57 

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