by Agustin
Blazquez with the collaboration of Jaums
Sutton
July
13, 2001 is the seventh anniversary of one
more unpunished crime by the Castro
regime. It was July 13, 1994, and again I
say, we must not forget the infamous case
of the "13 de Marzo" tugboat, in
which 72 Cuban men, women and children
were trying to escape for the U.S. In this
incident, 42 lost their lives, including
12 children – one of them just 6 months
old. The U.S. media was been silent when
it happened and thereafter has hardly
mentioned it.
According
to the testimony of survivors and Tim
Bower’s book Cuba: Between the Devil
and the Deep Blue Sea, the passengers
attempted to surrender and many of them
held their children up in the air. But
Castro’s Coast Guard was relentless in
their savage attack and began to pummel
the helpless passengers with water
cannons. Bower’s book recounts the
testimony that water cannons were used to
"spray children from the arms of
their mothers into the ocean waters."
Other children were simply swept off the
deck into the sea. Desperate to protect
the children, the women carried the
remaining children down into the boat’s
hold.
Maria
Victoria Garcia, a survivor of the
massacre who lost her husband and 10-year
old son, her brother, three uncles and two
cousins said, "We struggled to stay
above water by clinging to a floating
body. I held on to my son because I saw he
was weakening and he didn’t have the
strength to go on. But people fell on me
and my son slipped from my grasp."
Bower’s book explains, "The young
boy could not fight the huge waves created
by the government vessels and his mother
was forced to watch helplessly as her baby
drowned just five feet away."
The
survivors relate how "The tugboat
filled with water and cracked in two by
renewed ramming." Another survivor
relayed that she "saw how they (the
fire hoses) were filling the hold with
water. Once the boat was sinking, I
didn’t see anybody come out (of the
hold)."
Cuba’s
Coast Guard, following Castro’s orders,
executed this criminal massacre, which to
this day, remains unpunished. Those
responsible for this barbaric act received
congratulations and promotions from
Castro’s regime. And Castro himself
travels the world with proud impunity.
Unlike Milosevic, he will not face justice
when he is no longer in charge since he
will be in charge until he dies.
This
was not the first time Cuban children have
suffered and paid with their lives at the
whim of the Castro regime.
Prior
to 1959 Cubans did not leave their
country; once Cuba became Castro’s, its
history is riddled with massive and daring
escapes. There are enough thrilling and
dramatic stories to fill entire libraries
and entire graveyards.
"I
had never faced death before nor saw it on
other people’s faces. I’ll never
forget those children. Or the look on
their mothers’ faces," said Eduardo
Serrera in Helga Silva’s book The
Children of Mariel.
Serrera,
recalls the traumatizing event he
experienced while leaving via the port of
Mariel, Cuba in 1980. He was crammed
aboard a 24-foot shrimp boat along with 36
men, women and children. He was leaving
with his mother, but Castro’s guards
forced them to travel apart. He lost track
of her.
"By
the third day water started coming into
the boat. We used everything at hand –
buckets, containers – to bail out."
Fortunately, around noon the U.S. Coast
Guard spotted the boat. Serrera recalls,
"The sailors had to make a human
chain to physically lift us from our
sinking boat."
Aboard
the cutter on their way to the U.S., they
encountered other Cubans in distress in
the Florida Strait. But not everybody
could be saved because the waves prevented
the Coast Guard cutter from getting close
enough to rescue them. A boat was drifting
away and falling apart and Serrera cannot
forget the screams for help.
"It
was awful." When the women aboard
realized that they could not be rescued,
they "picked up their children and
threw them over the railings over to our
side. Eight or nine children were flung in
the air. I caught one, a baby – about
nine months old – so cold his skin was
blue. And his eyes were open wide in
terror.
"The
women on the boat looked so desperate when
their boat began to drift away. They
wailed in pain. I could hear their voices
trail off in the darkness begging us to
look after their children."
According
to Helga Silva’s book, of the more than
125,000 refugees who came to the U.S.
during the 1980 Mariel boatlift, there
were 13,000 to 18,000 minors.
However,
the biggest exodus of unaccompanied
children ever recorded in the Western
Hemisphere – which is largely unknown to
the American people thanks to the U.S.
media – took place in Cuba from December
26, 1960 through October 22, 1962. During
that period, 14,048 children between the
ages of 6 and 18 years left Cuba for the
U.S. in what was later called
"Operation Peter Pan."
This
massive exodus was triggered by the
increasing revelation of Castro’s turn
to communism. This awakened fears in Cuban
parents that they were about to lose the
right to make decisions about raising
their children and their education as
happened in the Soviet Union, China and
other communist regimes.
This
fear was well founded. On May 1, 1960,
Castro ordered the creation of communist
indoctrination schools and private schools
were under increasing pressure from the
regime to change to Marxist textbooks to
indoctrinate the children. Many private
schools closed rather than be taken over
by Castro’s regime. Many parents kept
their children home instead of sending
them to public schools where communist
indoctrination had already begun. The
future didn’t look promising for
families under Castro in 1960, just as
today.
Cuba
is a country where parents have taken
extraordinary risks for decades to get
their children out. This desperate exodus
has Castro’s fingerprints all over it.
He often uses a crisis to divert attention
from his failing revolution as he
masterminded with the Elian Gonzalez case.
These
stories of daring escapes from Castro’s
Cuba are just a few grains of salt on the
vast sea of the ongoing tragedies taking
place for the last 42 years in the Florida
Strait. The fact that Cubans have been
risking their lives and would rather die
at sea is very eloquent testimony, indeed.
When
taking a vacation cruise traveling through
the Florida Strait, just consider for a
minute the thousands of lives that have
been needlessly lost at sea and the last
minute human struggle for survival of men,
women and children before they drown or
are eaten by sharks - about 84,800. All of
it because of the ambition for power of
one man shielded behind a failed and
inhumane political system and very much
protected by the silence of the U.S.
media.
Let
us remember on July 13 all the children
who died along with their parents seeking
freedom. Is it moral to look the other way
in order to visit Cuba as tourists? Or for
the sake of making some dubious business
deals, giving up principles and ideals on
behalf of a man and the dehumanized
political system he created to violate the
human rights of the citizens of his
nation?
©
2001 ABIP
Agustin Blazquez
Producer/Director of the documentaries
COVERING CUBA, COVERING CUBA 2: The
Next Generation and the upcoming COVERING
CUBA 3
ABIP@olg.com