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TO
ARREST FIDEL
By
Jamie Glazov
Frontpage Magazine.com
July 31, 2001
IT’S
HIGH TIME to arrest Fidel Castro. The next
time the Cuban dictator travels abroad,
foreign security officials should handcuff
him and charge him with assassination, human
rights abuses and torture.
In
1998, a Spanish magistrate attempted to
bring former Chilean dictator Augusto
Pinochet to justice in Spain for the murder
of Spanish citizens in Chile between 1973
and 1983. Today, we are witnessing the
efforts in Belgium to try Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon for the massacre of
800 people at the Sabra and Shatilla refugee
camps while he was Israel's minister of
defense in the early 1980s.
And
so what about Castro? Why hasn’t he been
brought to justice? What makes him
different?
What
makes Fidel different, aside from the fact
that he has killed far more people than
Sharon and Pinochet put together, is that he
is a communist tyrant, and communists are
never held accountable for their crimes
against humanity. That’s because the
Western Left needs to keep its ideals alive
– even though those ideals spawn genocide.
For the Left, giving up the socialist faith
is not an alternative.
It
is no mystery, therefore, that there were no
Nuremberg-type trials in Moscow after the
fall of Soviet communism. Despite the tens
of millions of human beings that were
exterminated by the Soviet experiment, the
Left could not allow its religion to come
under scrutiny.
Since
coming to power in 1959, Fidel has been
personally involved in the assassination of
hundreds of people. Many crimes that were
committed in the 1970s and 1980s by Leftist
guerrilla groups in Latin America can be
brought directly to his doorstep.
The
1989 attack on the Argentine military
barracks at La Tablada, which killed 39
people, was Castro’s responsibility. The
guerrilla group which mounted that attack,
the All for the Fatherland Movement, was
organized, trained and financed by Cuba.
Jorge Masetti, a former Cuban intelligence
operative now living in France, confirms
that Castro was behind the La Tablada
massacre. He has also verified that many of
the guerrilla groups that have carried out
assassinations and massacres throughout
Latin America have done so at Castro’s
behest. The Colombian guerrilla group known
as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC), for instance, derives its
ideology, training and direction from Cuba.
Let’s
also not forget the murder of three U.S.
citizens, who were flying the “Brothers to
the Rescue” planes, that were shot down by
Cuban fighter jets in 1996. As the Hearing
Before the Subcommittee on Crime of the
Committee on the Judiciary House of
Representatives in July, 1999 conclusively
demonstrated, Castro gave the order for that
killing.
All
of this is not to mention Castro’s crimes
against his own people.
The
Cuban dictator heads a ruthless tyranny.
Cuban citizens do not have the right to
travel freely in and out of Cuba. There is
no freedom of expression. At least five
thousand Cubans have been executed since the
1959 revolution. In the mid-1960s, Castro
himself admitted to keeping 25,000 political
prisoners. Torture is institutionalized.
Many human rights organizations have
documented the regime’s use of electric
shocks, the incarceration of prisoners in
dark isolation cells the size of coffins,
and beatings to extract false confessions.
Stalin
built his utopia with the Gulag; Hitler did
it with Auschwitz. Fidel has distinguished
himself in the same light with Los Pinos.
The abominable nature of his regime is
illuminated by the horrifying experience of
Armando Valladaras, a Cuban poet who endured
twenty years of torture and imprisonment for
merely raising the issue of freedom. His
book, Against All Hope, which serves as
Cuba's version of Solzhenitsyn's Gulag
Archipelago, provides the most indicting and
heart-wrenching account of Castro’s
atrocious human-rights record.
The
Cuban dictator himself knows that justice
still exists. In 1998, when Pinochet was
arrested on a trip to London, Castro was on
a state visit to Lisbon. When his aides
heard about Pinochet’s arrest, they cut
short the tyrant’s planned visit to Spain
and Portugal and immediately flew him back
to Cuba.
On
Thanksgiving Day, 1999, little six-year old
Elian Gonzalez was found by fishermen
floating in an inner tube off Florida's
coast. One wonders what Elian’s mom
thought about when she looked at her son for
the last time before she drowned.
A
Mussolini or Ceausescu-style ending is too
good to be true in Fidel’s case, but one
dares to hope for something second best. Let
us hope that Castro decides to step outside
of his prison camp just several more times.
*Jamie
Glazov holds a Ph.D. in History with a
specialty in Soviet Studies. He is the
author of 15 Tips on How to be a Good
Leftist.. His father, Yuri Glazov, was a
Soviet dissident during the Brezhnev era,
who signed the Letter of Twelve, denouncing
Soviet human rights abuses. His mother,
Marina Glazov, also participated in the
dissident movement in the Soviet Union,
actively typing and circulating Samizdat -
the underground political literature. To
avoid imprisonment, Yuri Glazov took his
family out of the USSR in 1972 and settled
in Canada in 1975, when Jamie was 9. Today
Jamie battles socialism from his high-tech
warroom in Toronto. He writes the Dr.
Progressive advice column for angst-ridden
leftists at EnterStageRight.com. E-mail him
at jglazov@home.com.
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