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Perhaps this is the beginning of the long-awaited thaw in Cuba. I hope so, but this is a big iceberg that's been around for a long time, so we may have to be patient. These are baby steps, but they seem to be leading in the right direction. Enough metaphors for one night.
Richie
Small steps, but Cuba is no China
FRANÇOIS BUGINGO AND BENOÎT HERVIEU
Special to Globe and Mail Update
March 18, 2008 at 12:54 AM EDT
After acting as president since mid-2006,
Raul Castro was finally appointed Cuba's head of state in his own right by the country's executive Council of State on Feb. 24. Many of the circumstances surrounding the transfer of power from his brother, Fidel, are unknown, but people are beginning to talk of a policy of "small steps." We have to recognize that this transitional government has taken a significant step in an area it had hitherto ignored: human rights.
A week before the appointment, Alejandro Gonzalez, one of 27 journalists arrested during the Black Spring of 2003 was released on health grounds, along with three other dissidents. And four days after the official handover, Cuba signed two United Nations covenants — one concerning economic, social and cultural rights; the other concerning civil and political rights.
The most radical dissidents scoffed at these steps — the government continues to hold about 240 prisoners of conscience (including 23 journalists) and tolerates no opposition, no labour freedom, no independent press. But moderates were cautiously optimistic.
For many years, Raul Castro's image was that of an inflexible general in the shadow of his elder brother. Nowadays, he is being portrayed as a pragmatist, a man of change, a sort of Cuban Mikhail Gorbachev. Mr. Castro himself seems rather to identify himself with Deng Xiaoping, the Chinese architect of (economic) change with (political) continuity. Everything for tourism and foreign investment, but nothing for human rights, political pluralism or basic freedoms.
Cuba is obviously not China. Although it is a member of the UN Human Rights Council, it has no large market to divert attention from its repressive practices. But that could be seen as to its advantage. Could Mr. Castro's regime continue for many more years to claim that keeping its dissidents in prison is a matter of national security and sovereignty? It was on the absurd grounds that the 27 journalists had violated "Cuba's territorial integrity and sovereignty" that they were arrested in 2003 and given sentences ranging from 14 to 27 years in prison, although all they did was work for non-government news media.
Nineteen of them are still in prison five years later, mistreated by their guards, deprived of medical treatment and sometimes punished with solitary confinement. Another journalist has been held without trial since 2005, and three others have been jailed on a charge of "pre-crime social dangerousness" since Mr. Castro took over in 2006. However, eight of the journalists have been released on health grounds since 2004, and it is hard for the regime to claim that those it is still holding are more harmful. The recent releases are an implicit recognition of this.
By freeing more of its political prisoners, the Cuban government would be honouring the two UN covenants it has just signed.
The small step of a signature leads to bigger steps: opening prisons, and opening up to democracy.
The health and education systems Cuba has developed and the punitive U.S. embargo do not exempt the regime from respecting human rights and the rule of law. Cuba is not China, and should not try to imitate it.
François Bugingo is president of Reporters Without Borders Canada. Benoît Hervieu is head of the Americas desk for Reporters Without Borders.