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BARLOVENTO:
The Massacre of Cuban-Chinese © 2003 ABIP
by Agustin Blazquez and Jaums Sutton
Barlovento is a marina development that
flourished before 1959 near Jaimanita Beach
northwest of Havana.
When Castro was in need of U.S. dollars to
prop-up his regime he converted that area
into “Hemingway Marina” which became popular
among rich and famous foreigners, including
yachting Americans, all of whom find dubious
amusements and business deals while spending
the coveted U.S. dollars, to this day,
oblivious that the blood of innocent
civilians taint the waters.
This is the area where
U.S.
fugitive Robert Vesco lived in luxury on his
stolen U.S. dollars until he fell out of
favor with Castro (perhaps because he ran
out of dollars). He was put in jail under
the pretext of some shady pharmaceutical
deals with a visiting relative of the late
president Richard Nixon who worked for one
the powerful pharmaceutical companies in the
U.S.
But today, Armando Lago, a Ph. D. in
Economics from Harvard University, continues
working on his book “CUBA: The Human Cost of
Social Revolutions. The Black Book of Cuban
Communism,” documenting the deaths caused by
Castro’s regime from 1959 to the present.
According to Dr. Lago’s ongoing research,
the total currently ranges between 90,827
and 102,722 deaths (much higher than the
3,000 attributed to Chile’s Augusto
Pinochet).
Every one of the deaths Castro has caused
deserves to be documented and presented to
the world for its review. But,
unfortunately, very few are known to the
American public because of the bias and
censorship of the U.S. media and academia.
One of the individual incidents has been
known only to the Cuban exile community and
due to the lack of documentation seemed to
be at risk of becoming mere folklore. Dr.
Alberto Fibla in his 1996 book in Spanish
“Barbarie” (Barbarism) describes this
incident on page 36 for the first time. Dr.
Fibla, was in prison in Cuba from 1962 to
1988 for opposing Castro’s tyranny.
But, in the course of his exhaustive
research, Dr. Lago finally uncovered the
documentation of that incident. It was
thanks to former political prisoner Ela
Castro. When about to be released from
prison a fellow inmate gave her a copy of
the court sentencing documents of the
survivors for her to smuggle out. Ela
Castro was then able to smuggle the document
out of Cuba when she came to exile in the
U.S.
As Dr. Lago worked on a chapter of his book
that deals with the crimes perpetrated by
Castro’s regime against unarmed civilians
who attempt to escape Cuba in boats or
makeshift rafts, he decided that now that
the credentials are available the story
should be told immediately, rather than wait
for the release of his book. So he shared
the details of the story with me, complete
with the names of the victims.
So now, for the first time, the complete
story.
On January 15, 1962, the Cuban Coast Guard,
following Castro’s standing orders,
massacred a group of 29 civilians whose
terrible crime, so damaging to Castro’s
revolution, was wanting to leave
Cuba
for the U.S. Among them were eight
Cuban-Chinese from the town of Bauta and the
neighborhood of Marianao, near that
rich-man’s-paradise renamed “Hemingway
Marina.”
On that winter night, the group went aboard
the 31-foot rented boat “Pretexto” (Pretext)
anchored at the marina.
But Castro’s
Gestapo-type
State
Security (SS) was already very well prepared
and because of its pervasive web of
informants, knew of their plans well in
advance and had time to organize a dramatic
ambush, rather than peacefully apprehending
the participants. Castro’s rule-by-fear
depends on bloody spectacles as a deterrent
lesson to repress others.
As the boat began to head out of the marina
in Channel No. 1, the main deep-water
channel, it was abruptly halted by a heavy
steel chain that had been strung across the
channel.
The refugees looked ahead and saw a Cuban
Navy vessel anchored at the entrance of the
channel that opened fire on them with
30-caliber machine guns. And from one side,
more machine gun fire began, completing a
multisided attack.
Since the “Pretexto” was unarmed, it was
unable to defend itself.
The result of this cowardly and unjustified
attack against 29 unarmed civilians was five
dead, including three Cuban-Chinese.
According to the court documents Dr. Lago
received, the 24 survivors of this crime
were sentenced to 20 years in prison in the
Judicial Docket (Causa) No. 60 of 1962 by
the Revolutionary Tribunal of La Cabana
Fortress. This episode came to be known in
the Cuban-exile community as “The Chinese
Massacre at Barlovento.”
The names of the five assassinated by
Castro’s forces can now be given; they are:
Amalia-Cora Corzo, Fernando Gil Garcia, both
from the Marianao neighborhood and
Cuban-Chinese Lee Suey Chuy, Guan Xi Lui and
Yak Yim Pan, all from the town of Bauta.
In addition to Dr. Fibla’s book mention, the
second source for Dr. Lago’s report is the
Revolutionary Tribunal of the Revolutionary
District of Havana; the Judge was Vicente
Alvarez Crespo in Judicial Docket (Causa)
No. 60 of 1962, July 4, 1962, pp 1-2.
This case at Barlovento Marina – now the
bloody waters of the “Hemingway Marina” -
was not the first or the last incident in
the sad history. There are many more
cases. Among the most infamous cases are at
the Canimar River in the province of
Matanzas on July 6, 1980 where 11 unarmed
civilians died and the July 13, 1994 sinking
of the "13 of March” tugboat outside the
waters of the Bay of Havana in which 41
unharmed civilians (men and women) lost
their lives along with 12 innocent children.
Dr. Lago, in his incoming book, will
document these and other cases. Hopefully
this book will not be ignored by the U.S.
media and academia as they did with “THE
BLACK BOOK OF COMMUNISM: Crimes Terror
Repression” published in French in 1997 and
translated to English by Harvard University
Press (October, 1999). But it seems that
while the Nazi crimes are still publicized
to this day, the crimes of the communists
are being systematically ignored.
It is very revealing indeed of the U.S.
media and academia, but what can the purpose
of their avoidance of the truth of Communism
be? After Castro falls and
Cuba
hopefully becomes a free and democratic
country, many of those guilty in this
cover-up will have to answer.
The right to leave and return to any country
is guaranteed by the United Nations
Declaration of Human Rights. And Cuba is a
signatory of this document. But, as usual,
Castro’s signature means nothing since his
regime has been systematically violating
this right and so many others since 1959.
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