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Culture > Cuba > Elusive reform ...
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Elusive reform in Cuba

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 8, 2008 at 01:19 PM

Article published Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Elusive reform in Cuba

IN FEBRUARY, Cuba saw a monumental change: Fidel Castro officially 
stepped down from his 49-year rule as president. But at least one 
subsequent incident makes clear that if the country wants to see reform, 
it will have to do more than simply change its head of state.

After all, the new administration is not all that new. Mr. Castro was 
replaced by Mr. Castro - that is, Raul Castro, his younger brother, who 
has been second-in-command since 1965.

On April 21, 10 women, dressed in T-****rts bearing the photos of their 
husbands, all of whom are political prisoners, staged a demonstration in 
a park next to Havana's Plaza de la Revolucion, near Cuba's government 
and Communist Party headquarters. Members of a group called the Ladies 
in White, they are seeking the release of their husbands. On that day 
they demanded to meet with Raul Castro before they would agree to leave 
the park.

Instead of meeting with them, Mr. Castro dispatched 20 female police 
officers to round them up. The demonstrators held fast, though, and the 
officers needed several extra government workers to drag the Ladies in 
White onto a bus that hauled them away.

Not that anyone would expect dramatic political reform from a new 
Castro-in-Chief, but this kind of intolerance of even a nonviolent 
protest makes a hypocrite of the new Cuban president.

First, Mr. Castro stated during his inaugural address, "This society … 
is undoubtedly full of justice and everybody in it has the op****tunity 
to express their views." Second, just days after Mr. Castro was 
"elected" president, his foreign minister signed two international human 
rights treaties, the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and 
Cultural Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political 
Rights. The agreements commit Cuba to respect basic rights like freedom 
of expression and association.

Amnesty International says, however, that Cuba has at least 58 
"prisoners of conscience," making it one of the most repressive 
governments in the world.

If Mr. Castro truly believes in justice and human rights, he should 
honor his word. He should meet with the Ladies in White, release Cuba's 
political prisoners, and apologize to the families terrorized by 
political oppression under either Castro.

http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080507/OPINION02/805070311
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Elusive reform in Cuba
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-05-08 13:19:22 

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