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Will American tourism
hasten Castro's downfall?
Dictator is desperately seeking dollars.
Frank Calzon
On July 26, the 48th
anniversary of the start of Fidel Castro's
revolution, the U.S. House of
Representatives voted not to implement the
law that bars American tourists from
traveling to Cuba.
Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz.,
introduced the measure. Rep. Lincoln Díaz-Balart,
R-Fla., told El Nuevo Herald that Flake
explained to him that he had become
interested in the topic ``after a lobbying
visit by Cuban dissident Elizardo Sánchez
Santa Cruz.''
Sánchez, whom I consider my
friend, stated in a press release
distributed in Washington by the Center for
International Policy that, ``To maintain the
restrictions on travel to Cuba favors only
the Cuban regime.'' If this is so, why did
the Havana regime immediately celebrate
Flake's proposal.
Castro allowed Sánchez to
travel to Miami to attend his son's funeral.
The Center for International Policy blames
Washington for many of Cuba's problems,
while it ignores much of Castro's
repression.
Sánchez's lobbying is
important because he lives in Cuba. Cubans
on the island who support continuation of
the embargo as a form of pressure to secure
respect for human rights live under the
threat of imprisonment.
Let us refresh our memories.
In 1989, when the end of Soviet subsidies
plunged the regime into its worst crisis,
Castro was forced to allow some adjustments
in the economy. In what became known as
``the special period,'' Cubans were
permitted to work on their own (though with
many restrictions) in trades such as
carpentry, barbering, etc.
They also were permitted to
open restaurants at home -- paladares --
with no more than 12 seats. The possession
of dollars -- until then a crime punishable
by jail -- was legalizeed.
These reforms were conducted
solely and exclusively because the regime's
very survival was at stake. When the
government deemed that the situation had
improved a bit, it redoubled its repression.
There was a return to the arrest and daily
harassment of dissidents; Cubans again were
imprisoned for ``crimes'' as serious as
buying a chicken from a farmer; the number
of cuentapropistas -- self-employed workers
-- declined by more than 30 percent.
Yet, Castro still is
desperately seeking dollars and favors a
lifting of the embargo and the long-awaited
injection of millions of dollars brought by
tourists. Castro, who stopped paying his
country's debt in 1986, now wants loans from
the World Bank.
Sánchez, leader of a
human-rights organization on the island,
played a key role in the U.S. House's
approval of Flake's amendment, which was
part of an appropriations bill. Sánchez has
a serious responsibility on his hands and
would do well to use his influence to inform
some American politicians about the
following:
All business dealings with Cuba are joint ventures between the
regime and the foreign investor. Cubans are
not allowed to be partners.
Castro receives millions of dollars through labor fraud.
Foreign investors are not allowed to hire
workers on their own. The regime does the
hiring. The foreign companies pay the regime
between $8,000 and $9,000 a year for each
laborer, and the regime pays the laborer the
peso equivalent of $15 a month -- about $180
a year.
In Castro's segregated hotels, Cubans cannot rent rooms even
if they have dollars, nor can they enter the
restaurants, beaches or clinics set aside
for foreigners.
Tourism earnings are not like the family remittances sent from
abroad to ordinary Cubans. Tourism-generated
income goes directly to the regime's coffers
to strengthen the police and armed forces.
Gaviota, Cuba's official tourism agency, is
a front for the Cuban armed forces.
Cubans need an exit permit from the regime to travel abroad.
As in the old Soviet Union, Cubans also need
a permit to move from one city to another
within the national territory. Cubans who
live abroad need a permit from Castro to
visit their native land.
Castro confiscates all property of every Cuban who emigrates,
down to the electrical appliances and
furniture. Air fare and all immigration
paperwork inside Cuba must be paid in
dollars by the relatives abroad.
Ideas have consequences. Did
Elizardo Sánchez err when he lobbied
Congressman Flake? Did he take into account
the correlation of strength (of resources)
between the regime and the domestic
opposition? Will tourists risk their skin to
defend freedom? Will tourists bankroll with
their dollars an increase in the repression?
Let's pray to God that I'm
wrong and that my friend Elizardo Sánchez
won't have to regret his candid lobbying.
Meanwhile, he should think how he's going to
explain the affair to the dissidents who are
in the regime's horrid cross hairs.
Frank Calzón is
executive director of the Washington-based
Center for a Free Cuba.
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