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Fidel Castro's Dupes
by
Larry
Solomon (May 13, 2003)
[www.CapitalismMagazine.com] Fidel Castro
worked miracles after leading the Revolution
that liberated Cuba from the dictator,
Batista. The statistics are there, for any
fool to see.
Soon after Castro came to power in 1959, he
decided to eliminate illiteracy in the
island nation. As he stated in an address to
the United Nations the following year, "Cuba
will be the first country in America that in
a few months' time will be able to say that
it does not have a single illiterate
person." Castro was as good as his word. He
launched his Great Campaign for literacy in
January of 1961 and ended it in victory in
December that same year. Cuba is a
"territory free of illiteracy," he declared,
triumphantly announcing an end to "four
centuries of ignorance."
In a mere 12 months, Cuban
government
data demonstrated, socialism had
given the gift of learning to the Cuban
people. This eradication of widespread
illiteracy is widely regarded as one of his
Revolution's two stupendous social policy
successes.
The other stupendous social policy success
came in health care, where Castro gave his
people the gift of health and a long life.
By investing in doctors, hospitals and other
medical services geared to the poor, Cuba's
official statistics show, Cuba achieved one
of the world's best performances in terms of
broad statistical indicators such as life
expectancy and infant mortality. In
controlling AIDS, Cuba also has one of the
world's best showings. Among Castro's most
celebrated medical successes was the
absolute eradication of dengue fever, a
dreaded disease transmitted by mosquito that
has plagued
Cuba
and other tropical countries through time
immemorial.
To these two stupendous well publicized
successes must be added a third, even more
stupendous accomplishment, albeit little
appreciated outside Cuba. Castro's
accomplishments are a hoax; his statistics
have been fudged or fabricated; his admirers
abroad, from heads of state to movie makers
to social activists, have been duped,
dazzled by a beard in a military suit.
Castro's regime has excelled in only one
area, as seen in statistics from independent
agencies such as Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International.
The government claims it takes no political
prisoners. The numbers provided by human
rights agencies - an estimated 500,000 since
1959, with thousands
executed
- tell a different story. In
Castro's Cuba, it is a crime to meet to
discuss
the economy, to write letters to
the government, to report on political
developments, to speak to international
reporters, to advocate human rights, to
visit friends or relatives outside your
local area of residence without government
permission. Cubans are arrested without
warrants and prosecuted for "failing to
denounce" fellow citizens, for general
"dangerousness," and, should some crime not
be covered by these criminal code
provisions, for "other acts against state
security."
The courts, under Cuba's constitution, are
formally subordinate to the governing elite
and cannot protect the innocent. Neither can
lawyers, who lost their right to work in
private firms in 1973 and have been forced
to work either for the government or in
collectives. Lawyers who had defended
dissidents were refused membership in the
collectives.
Cubans found guilty under this criminal
justice system - and their fate is rarely in
doubt - often serve 10 to 20 years in jail
for political crimes. But most Cuban
criminals are not political. A large
proportion of the estimated 180,000 to
200,000 common criminals in
Cuba's
500 prisons are people who broke the law by
killing their own pigs, cattle and horses
and selling the excess meat on the black
market.
To maintain discipline inside prisons,
prison guards appoint hardened prisoners to
"prisoners' councils." Reports Human Rights
Watch: "The council members commit some of
Cuba's
worst prison abuses, including beating
fellow prisoners as a disciplinary measure
and sexually abusing prisoners, under direct
orders from or with the acquiescence of
prison officials."
Despite this appalling human rights record,
Castro has been courted and condoned by a
fawning international intelligentsia that
includes Harvard lawyers and statesmen who
have made their reputations defending civil
liberties. These include former Canadian
prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau -
Castro was an honorary pallbearer at his
funeral, no less - former South African
prime minister Nelson Mandela, and, more
recently, former U.S. president Jimmy
Carter. One world leader who has not been
duped is Czech President Vaclav Havel,
himself a political prisoner before the fall
of communism in Europe, who sponsored a
resolution condemning
Cuba
at the UN Commission on Human Rights.
Although Castro forbids collective
bargaining or even independent unions,
Western labour leaders endorse him. Although
Castro makes the top 10 "Enemies of the
Press" list produced by the Committee to
Protect Journalists', journalists such as
Peter Jennings and Barbara Walters have
covered him uncritically. Although artists
in
Cuba
must toe the government line, Harry
Belafonte and others who should understand
the importance of artistic freedom hold him
up as a paragon.
Those who cavort with Castro forgive him his
transgressions, reasoning that his feats
outweighed his faults, or that human rights
abuses were necessary to achieve his
towering accomplishments in literacy and
health. But there were no great ends that
justified his brutal means. Castro's feats
are all modest or non-existent.

Cartoon by
Cox and Forkum.
Literacy did improve under Castro but the
tale is hardly heroic - illiteracy was
neither high prior to the Revolution, as
Castro claimed, nor was it much changed
after Castro's Great Campaign. In fact,
since Castro came to power, other Latin
American countries made far greater gains in
literacy than Cuba, largely because Cuba
didn't have as far to climb - it already had
one of Latin America's highest literacy
rates.
Neither can Castro's health claims be taken
as credible because the health system, like
the legal system, is subordinate to his
regime's need for propaganda. In 1997, a
major epidemic of dengue fever, which causes
hemorrhaging, broke out in Cuba. Patients
were bleeding from every orifice of their
bodies and choking on their own blood.
Public health authorities and the
government's Institute of Tropical Medicine
called the disease "an unspecified virus"
and denied its existence, partly to protect
the reputation of Castro, who had personally
declared the disease's extinction, and
partly to protect the tourist industry,
which was becoming a major earner of foreign
exchange.
One physician, Dr. Dessy Mendoza Rivero,
recognized the disease as dengue fever and
tried to alert the authorities, only to find
a cover-up underway. Dr. Mendoza, the
president of a medical college, blew the
whistle by calling a Miami radio station and
telling the outside world of the disease.
"There are approximately 13 dead, 2,500
hospitalized patients and 30,000 afflicted,"
Dr. Mendoza revealed. Soon after, the Cuban
State Security police arrested him. He was
sentenced to eight years in prison for
"disseminating enemy propaganda," leading
Amnesty International to declare him a
"prisoner of conscience." Ironically, one
week after his sentencing the government
admitted that the epidemic was dengue fever.
Anecdotes abound of the government cooking
the books to prove the glories of the
Revolution to the world, with many academics
distrusting the official government figures.
A demographer from the National Academies of
Sciences found that the Cuban government's
own data was at odds with official overall
statistics for child mortality: If anything,
it indicated a growing, not a falling,
infant mortality rate, a suspicion supported
by other statistics from the Cuban Ministry
of Health which showed high rates of several
childhood diseases that generally correlate
with high infant mortality. Other scientists
doubt the claims made over HIV, noting the
many Cubans who had served in African wars,
the many African students in Cuba, the
rampant sex trade in Cuba, and the high rate
of HIV among Cubans who escaped from the
island. A secret 1987 Cuban Communist Party
survey of 10,756 respondents showed 88% of
the public in one province to be
disappointed with their health-care system.
When the Cuban suicide rate skyrocketed -
it's now twice the typical rate in Latin
American countries - the Cuban government
stopped reporting suicide statistics in a
way that allowed international comparisons.
To the extent that the Cuban government's
health claims are credible, the results
often came at a price no civilized society
could countenance. Patients with AIDS were
forcibly removed from society and isolated
in sanitaria. Expectant mothers with AIDS
were coerced into aborting their babies.
Abortions were similarly used to improve
infant mortality statistics in general -
Cuba has twice the abortion rate of most
countries - by terminating high-risk
pregnancies. To obtain co-operation from
doctors, their compensation was tied to
their patients' infant mortality rate. Many
Cuban mothers claim that their doctors
killed their baby at childbirth - babies who
die at birth do not show up in Cuba's infant
mortality data.
At the same time that some of Castro's
admirers deny claims that the medical system
is failing Cubans, other admirers admit to
the disastrous health outcomes, but blame
them on food, drug and other shortages
caused by the Cuban embargo. One such study,
published in the Annals of Internal
Medicine, lamented "several public health
catastrophes [including] more than 50,000
cases of optic and peripheral neuropathy . .
. A 1994 outbreak of the Guillain-Barré
syndrome in Havana was caused by water that
had been contaminated with Campylobacter
species because chlorination chemicals were
not available for purification."
The American embargo on Cuba did harm the
Cuban economy, but to a modest extent - the
most comprehensive study of its economic
effects showed a mere US$84-million to
US$167-million a year in lost exports. The
real harm to the Cuban economy was
self-inflicted: The economy collapsed
shortly after Castro took power, partly
because Cuba lost a staggering number of
managers and professionals who fled the
country and partly because Castro's central
economic plan - The First Economic and
Social Plan of a Socialist Nature of 1962 -
was ruinous, as Castro would later admit.
Food rationing began the same year.
Cuba,
once an important rice producer, now
produces less than it did before the
Revolution, its rice fields half as
productive as those of neighbouring
Dominican Republic.
Cuba also produces less sugar than before
the Revolution because, admits Castro, it
costs more to produce than it's worth.
Because Cubans can no longer efficiently
grow food - not because the
United States
won't provide Cuba with food exports -
Cubans consume less food today than before
the Revolution, and less food than citizens
of any other Latin American country.
Castro and others who argue that the embargo
hurt Cuba point to Cuba's shortage of food,
medicines and other necessities, as if these
could not be readily imported from Canada,
Europe and other nations. These economically
confused people, perhaps, are the greatest
dupes of all.
First published in the National Post.
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