Cuban
Dissidence Task Group
Havana City, June 27, 1997
INTRODUCTION
I -
HISTORICAL INTERPRETATION
II- IN THE NAME OF UNITY
III- THE MAIN OBJECTIVE
IV - THE PLAN FOR SOLVING THE
CRISIS
V - CONCLUSIONS
VI - RECOMMENDATIONS
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INTRODUCTION
When you
finish reading this document, you
will be able to support us if we
can agree on this initial
assertion:
Man cannot
live from history, which is the
same as living from stories. There
is a need for material goods and
for satisfying his spirituality,
as well as to be able to look to
the future with expectations. But
there is also a need for that
openness that we all know as
freedom.
The Cuban
government ignores the word
"opposition." Those of
us who do not share its political
stance, or who just simply don't
support it, are considered enemies
and any number of other scornful
designations that it chooses to
proclaim. Thus, they have also
sought to give a new meaning to
the word "Homeland" that
is distortedly linked to
Revolution, Socialism and Nation.
They attempt to ignore the fact
that "Homeland," by
definition, is the country in
which one is born.
All of this
aside, our Task Group has examined
the Project Document prepared for
the V Congress of the Cuban
Communist Party, scheduled to be
submitted for approval during this
event. Because it is impossible
for us to make public our
viewpoints here [in Cuba] (given
that the [Cuban] news media is in
the hands of the state), we have
decided to set them down in the
hope that they will somehow be
made known to Cubans inside and
outside the island. By this mean
we seek to defend our right to
express our opinion, because we
are convinced that THE HOMELAND
BELONGS TO US ALL.
I -
HISTORICAL INTERPRETATION
Of the
11,080 words that the document
contains, grouped into 260
paragraphs, more than 80% are
dedicated to interpreting history.
They wish to convince those that
read the document that:
•There has
been only one revolution [in Cuba]
since 1868; and •The U.S. has
tried to seize Cuba ever since the
19th century.
To try to
strengthen these assertions, they
invoke the name of [the father of
Cuban independence, Jose] Marti.
Thereby they
persist in the old and absurd
argument that the existence of a
single political party is based on
Marti's ideas, as only one party
was founded by him. There is no
known political leader that has
created various political parties
simultaneously. Nevertheless, many
distinguished freedom fighters in
their respective countries, once
independence was achieved, have
respected the multi-party system
of government. Washington, Mahatma
Ghandi and General DeGaulle were
among them.
There is no
reason to think that Marti, had he
survived the War of Independence,
would not have done the same given
his very positive views on
democracy. Point V of the Tenets
of the Cuban Revolutionary Party
(1892) states: "It is not the
goal of the Cuban Revolutionary
Party to bring to Cuba a
victorious group that will
consider the island as its prey
and dominion. It is, instead, to
prepare, by as many efficacious
means as freedom in exile permits,
the war which is to be fought for
the honor and welfare of all
Cubans, and to deliver to the
whole country a free
homeland."
Following
the war, no patriot argued for the
need to have a single party. On
the contrary, many actively
participated in politics with
different affiliations and all
respected the multi-party system.
Even though
they wish to portray the
democratic republic as a series of
interrupted failures and treasons,
they have to contend with the
socioeconomic achievements
obtained between 1902 and 1958
which placed our country among the
three most advanced nations of
Latin America. In some areas, in
fact, Cuba was ahead of even major
Old World countries such as Spain
and Italy. This undeniable reality
speaks volumes for the
industriousness of Cuban workers
and the enterprising spirit of our
businessmen— especially as all
these true accomplishments took
place following a major cataclysm
(our glorious War of Independence)
and in spite of the terrible
socioeconomic crisis of the 1930s.
In addition, there are the
political successes, such as the
revocation of the infamous Platt
Amendment in 1934 which the
political propaganda does not
mention, though its imposition in
1901 is well-remembered.
This
twisting of information is also
present in the document. If the
pre-1959 statistics are consulted,
it can be seen that the illiteracy
rate among the Cuban population at
the time amounted to 16% and not
40% as proclaimed. The statistics
are also manipulated when it is
stated that 7% of the population
voted in the elections at the turn
of the century. This implies that
the remaining 93% included
non-voting women (51%), children,
and the great number of foreigners
that lived here, as is to be
expected in a country that had
recently ceased to be a colony.
Regarding
the application of due process in
the trials held for members of the
Batista regime, Castroites have
their own interpretation. But it
must not be forgotten that—as
the document recognizes—those
principally implicated fled the
country on January 1st, on which
date the mass executions
commenced. Those that were shot by
the firing squads were arrested,
accused, judged and executed in
less than 24 hours. The rise to
power of the current government
was sealed by a vicious settling
of accounts. The so-called
"revolutionary trials"
bore no relation whatsoever to due
process nor to a true right to a
defense. A notorious example was
the trial of the pilots sentenced
after having been absolved, an
event which led to the suicide of
Captain Felix Pena.
Every year,
by an ever-growing number of
votes, the General Assembly of the
United Nations demands that the
so-called [U.S.]
"blockade" be ended.
This statement is true, but what
goes unsaid is that, with the same
frequency, the Cuban government is
sanctioned for its systematic
violations of human rights.
The October
[1962] "[Missile]
Crisis" is mentioned, while
omitting the fact that the Cuban
leadership urged Moscow to deliver
the first strike without waiting
for the "Yankees" to
take the initiative. This is
acknowledged by history. A nuclear
attack against the United States
would have meant a terrible
catastrophe for all humanity, but,
undoubtedly, Cuba would have been
swept from the map. That solution
to the crisis was offered by the
same party members that are now
worried—according to them—that
their departure from power would
mean the disappearance of Cuba as
a nation.
But can we
forget the autocratic way in which
nuclear weapons and foreign troops
were brought into the country? The
people learned of the matter only
after the problem arose.
As the
document well states:
"Everything began to change
on July 26, 1953." We should
not fail to mention that—in
effect—on that date, for the
first time in many years, much
Cuban blood was spilled. Up to
that time, the deaths in the
political struggle which occurred
under the Batista government could
be counted on the fingers of one
hand. To find in Cuban history as
mournful and fratricidal a day as
this, we would have to go back to
decades long past. Despite its
being such a sad day, it has been
made into a holiday and celebrated
as such. This, we suppose, meets
with the disapproval of even the
fallen martyr's own relatives.
These are
but a few examples of the way in
which the Communists have sought
to INTERPRET HISTORY.
II - IN THE NAME OF UNITY
The party
insists on unity but forgets that,
for that unity to be valid and
real (and not a mere parody), it
is necessary for a consensus
freely reached by the citizenry to
emerge. The opposite would amount
to a brutish imposition that would
be a unity in name only. We the
members of the opposition are here
to show that in our country there
is no consensus.
The text
asserts that: "Only the unity
of revolutionaries can lead to the
unity of the people." This
argument, just like every other
perspective on this matter,
suffers from what is known in
logic as "circular
reasoning," whereby that
which is sought to be demonstrated
is taken as a starting premise.
The party,
declaring itself the
representative of the people,
prepared the document that warns
the citizenry to participate in
the meetings to support it. The
people, subjected to the pressures
of totalitarian power, attend
[these meetings], and the fact is
portrayed to the world as a
plebiscite on Cuban society. This
is declared the most evident and
irrefutable proof that the party
represents all of the people. It
is precisely the same premise that
was used as a starting point.
Although there is talk of
plebiscite, the people have felt
what it is like to be trampled
upon. A latent popular will still
exists, just as when General
Arnaldo Ochoa and his comrades
were sentenced to execution by
firing squad. Even though the vast
majority did not agree with this
sentence, it was officially
declared as necessary and the
opinions of the masses ignored.
If, as its
leaders assert, the citizenry in
general supports the Communist
Party, there is no reason not to
hold internationally-supervised,
free elections, which would serve
to silence all the detractors of
the system.
In the name
of unity, the Fist Party Congress
considered it legitimate to bestow
upon itself constituent powers and
approve the final version of the
1976 Magna Carta. This includes
Article 5, which proclaims the
[Cuban Communist] Party as "a
guiding force superior to society
and the state."
We are aware
that there are historical
precedents for this concept of
unity. The Cuban Communist Party,
in imposing a single party system,
places itself in the unenviable
company of Stalin, Mussolini,
Hitler, Franco, Trujillo, Pol Pot
and Sadam Hussein, among others.
Having
called the ranks to order on the
matter of unity, the party saw it
fit to declare that "the
Cuban people have decided to have
a single party." But, in the
name of unity, under the concept
of shared-guilt for mistakes, we
have seen many things that have
left their mark on history for
having contributed to create chaos
and instability in the country. It
will suffice to cite a few
examples:
•The
attempt to drain the Cienaga de
Zapata wetlands; •The creation
of an "agricultural
belt" around Havana; * The
collectivization of agriculture;
•The genetic alteration of
livestock, in particular of
cattle; •The authoring of a plan
for food rationing and the mass
production of "micro
jet" bananas; •The
dismantling of the sugar industry
and the attempts to alter cane
varieties; •The imposition of
ideas that entail disastrous
investments, such as the Paso Seco
Dam, which is a monument to that
which should not be undertaken.
Likewise, in
the name of unity, a sugar mill
was given as a gift to Nicaragua,
an airport was built in Granada
and, under the mantle of so-called
"Proletarian
Internationalism," troops
were sent off to kill and die in
different countries. To be sure,
this was something that was never
done under what they call the
"subjugated republic,"
whose various governments refused
to send troops to fight in either
of the two world wars or the
Korean war. This despite the fact
that the "Yankee
imperialists" did so. In
this, our northern neighbor truly
set itself apart from the Soviet
Union, which—not practicing what
it preached—enabled and financed
the sending of Cuban troops to a
whole series of countries.
The
document, by the way, makes only a
passing reference to these
"missions" so as to
avoid having to explain just what
was achieved through that useless
effort. Its only significance for
the [Cuban] people was the breakup
of families, mourning, pain and
exotic diseases, among other
things. Angola and Ethiopia—to
cite only two such countries—exacted
a high death toll among our fellow
Cubans. At present, over in those
strange lands, Angola seeks a
national solution with the
participation of UNITA and the
genocidal general Mengistu
Haile-Marian, decorated here in
Cuba with the Order of Jose Marti,
fled ignominiously from Ethiopia.
In addition, when it was
considered convenient, unity was
invoked to welcome our exiled
brothers as representatives of the
"Cuban community
overseas." This after
families had been keep apart and
their mail hindered to avoid any
kind of affectionate exchanges.
Because of
what it represented for the
tattered finances of the country,
party members were told that they
could welcome into their homes
those same people that had been
reviled as "traitors"
and "worms;" those that
had had to endure the egg-throwing
and blows of the renowned
"popular dignity
demonstrations." The latter
subsequently gave rise to the
Rapid Response Brigades and the
detestable "acts of
repudiation."
In the name
of unity, the "captive
villages" were created,
religious people were persecuted,
and churches were practically left
without priests. The document
points out that: "The
Congress approved the admission
into the party of revolutionaries
with religious beliefs." This
implies that they take pride in a
decision that bridles the shame of
more than 30 years of persecuting
those who profess religious ideas.
If we look back, all of this came
about, in good measure, due to
opportunistic motives, as some
members had turned religious just
to be let go from the party.
The unity to
which the party refers is not
about ideas, but about the aim
that the people rally around the
party leadership.
For the
rest, we cannot accept that a
government which has dedicated
itself to dividing the country can
speak IN THE NAME OF UNITY.
III - THE
MAIN OBJECTIVE
The
philosophy of the government is
not to serve the people but to be
their dictator. It is not its main
objective to guarantee the
citizenry a quality of life which
has a minimum of decorum. Power,
exercised through totalitarian
control, is the end that is being
pursued with this political ploy.
No longer is anyone fooled by the
much-touted call to social
justice. The wage rates combined
with the stagnation of other
economic factors makes the
situation of the populace more
difficult each day. And the more
they deteriorate, the more the
economic activities are
politicized and militarized.
Something
which is truly deserving of a
triple-X rating in the meaning
assigned to what is termed the
Socialist Civil Society. The
document's authors wish to ignore
the fact that a civil society is
made up of elements outside the
control of the state and therefor
cannot be socialist or, what
amounts to the same thing,
"sovietist."
IV - THE
PLAN FOR SOLVING THE CRISIS
In a
paragraph detailing some of the
accomplishments of the government,
the following statement appears:
"Our country became covered
with highways and roads, as well
as with waterworks for productive
uses. Milking machinery and aerial
spraying, previously unknown
technologies in rural communities,
were put in place."
However,
reality confronts us with the fact
that there are no means of
transportation on the highways and
roads, and that there is
insufficient water available to
supply the major cities. In
particular, there are heavily
populated neighborhoods in the
city of Havana where there are
serious shortages of the precious
liquid, and whole provinces—Santiago
de Cuba being the prime example—are
experiencing irrigation problems.
The cattle
population has declined. In 1955
it reached a per capita level of
0.82 heads per inhabitant. Forty
years later it was 0.38. The milk
that was distributed in the 1980s
originated from trade with the
former German Democratic Republic.
As there are practically no cows
left to milk, the automated
milking machinery has turned into
scrap heaps from lack of care and
maintenance. In the long term, far
from serving to increase
agricultural food production, all
of the methods that were
indiscriminately and inefficiently
introduced have only hindered its
development. The old methods at
least yielded reliable results and
allowed the needs of the
population to be met.
Further on,
the document asserts that more
than three million hectares were
handed over to the Basic Units for
Cooperative Production (BUCP). The
pretense here was to make it seem
that this was an innovative
production method which would pull
agriculture out of its presently
critical situation. However, more
than three years have passed since
their establishment and no results
can be seen. The government
itself, through its official
spokespersons, has declared that
only 7% of the BUCPs are even
marginally cost-effective. To this
we can add that more than 60% of
the state organizations have been
recently deemed unreliable. It has
also been recognized that the
sugar mills are not grinding cane
in a cost-effective manner but
that, as cane production cannot be
curtailed, nothing can be done
about it.
Allusions
are made, in speaking of the
changes and the things
accomplished up to the time of the
Special [Economic] Period, to how
the food production program could
have been successfully developed.
This implies that at present this
program is no longer viable. But
no alternative is presented; not
even the slightest suggestion that
could put an end to the severe
rationing that has lasted now 35
years—a world record.
After
considering the ensuing
paragraphs, one may also conclude
that there is also no plan for
solving the country's economic and
social crisis. For Cuba to partake
in the global economy without
renouncing its totalitarian ways,
the challenge is more than
difficult. The stagnation that has
characterized the Cuban
government's policies continue to
increase its alienation from
financial institutions, the
assistance of multinational
consortiums such as the European
Union, and even from the
possibility of entering into any
bilateral agreements. The foreign
financing situation is dismal and
it is not possible to continue to
pay short-term loans with interest
rates of 17 or 18%. However, loans
that offer at least low initial
rates are difficult to obtain.
What does
the Communist Party offer the
people? "We will have only
that which we are capable of
creating," it tells them.
More than a promise, it seems a
mournful threat about the
proverbial inefficiency of the
production system and about the
usual limitations which it imposes
on the citizenry. The list of
problems is enormous.
Nevertheless, only material
problems are addressed and no
mention is made of the spiritual
needs of our people, much less
about the lack of all sorts of
freedoms. For the party, the
concrete tasks ahead are clear,
but it does not identify for the
populace the solutions to the
problems, the timetables involved,
or the differing view points. It
is as if, suddenly, the future
were synthesized into that one
slogan. Faced with our harsh
reality, there is only room for
the patriotic and revolutionary
code-of-conduct of working more
and better.
That past
that is portrayed as something so
brilliant should not have given
rise to the present crisis, as all
of those accomplishments and
conquests have been touted about
since the 1960s. Accepting what
the communists allege, it can only
mean that they have given nothing
to the people in the last 30
years. It is a case, then, of a
regime anchored in the past and
which lives in the past—and
quite a remote past at that.
V -
CONCLUSIONS
When on
January 28th the U.S. government
published its Plan in Support of a
Transition [in Cuba], there was no
alternative response by the Cuban
government regarding the
responsibilities identified in the
plan to support a transition
process. The document issued by
the Communist Party is not such an
alternative because it offers
nothing concrete to the Cuban
people. The following matters are
still without explanation:
•the way
in which the catastrophic economic
situation will be solved; •a
solution for the ideological
vacuum that the current political
crisis has created, one result of
which has been the use of foreign
flags by young people in their
attire; •what is going to be
done to maintain at least the
levels of service once attained in
public health, education and
social security, so as not to
increase the painful situation of
the population; •what the Cuban
government will agree to do in
order to solve international
disagreements and to try to adopt
global economic standards; •the
measures it will take to eliminate
the embargo; the means to be used
to recover those parts of the
Cuban territory occupied by
foreign military bases: •Guantanamo
[Bay], Lourdes and Cienfuegos; •ways
in which to address the growing
number of people that express
their opposition to the official
political position and to stop the
treatment of Cuban citizens as
third class people in their own
country.
It is no
secret that Cuba had the worst
performance in the region during
the five-year period between '91
and '95, and that even though it
is said that an economic recovery
occurred in 1996, the populace
never experienced it. Upon the
termination of Soviet-block aid,
the inefficiency of the system
increased and foreign commerce
diminished.
There is no
doubt that the socioeconomic
policies need to be reformed and
redesigned so as to achieve better
results. The use of the society
and the economy to exert controls
has to cease.
Cuba needs a
recovery based on high rates of
sustainable growth to bring itself
back into the realm of intense
international competition and
dynamic technological change. What
the party has set forth is not
this. It is merely an attempt to
maintain the status quo of
obsolete totalitarianism; to
entrap us in social and economic
backwardness amidst a dynamic and
competitive world.
No one
wishes a return to the negative
aspects of the 1950s, as the
government argues. The realities
of the world have change and those
of our country too. The transition
toward democracy that we wish to
achieve is based on the
fundamental principles of the 1940
Constitution, which establishes
social rights that have nothing to
do with the influx of
neo-liberalism. The current
situation whereby foreign
companies hire their workers
through a state intermediary could
be termed neo-totalitarian.
Through such an arrangement, the
state exploits the workers without
even offering them stable
employment.
The document
does not offer the possibility of
establishing a true constitutional
state, nor an independent and
impartial legal system that would
protect the liberties and rights
of the individual and the practice
of political pluralism.
The
government, given its current
position, has no chance of
stabilizing the economy quickly
and without a recession, and this
is a necessary pre-condition to
effectively achieve an economic
recovery and consolidation.
VI -
RECOMMENDATIONS
The document
states that economic
liberalization is linked to the
creation of joint-ventures and
other forms of business
arrangements with foreign
companies. But this has not been
enough, and is far less than what
is needed. What is needed is a
process of true economic
liberalization, which would entail
the democratization of the
country. The Cuban community
overseas—amounting to a million
and a half people—could
undoubtedly contribute to a
sustained economic recovery.
Currently, in fact, the financial
assistance that [the exiles] send
to their relatives on the island
accounts for a substantial portion
of the country's import-purchasing
power. This is demonstrated by the
fact that the government has gone
so far as to as to impose taxes on
the receipt of this money.
The Cubans
on the island have demonstrated
what they are capable of
accomplishing if given even a
small degree of economic freedom.
The self-employed—whom the
system has tried to drown because
of what they represent from a
political perspective—manage to
turn any small business they
undertake into models of
efficiency. In this regard, the
Revolution stimulates the
creativity of the masses in all
fields of endeavor. Innumerable
innovations have been introduced
to production and service
activities. If there is a true
desire to stimulate the creativity
of the masses in all areas, then
they must be allowed to enter the
economic arena. Cubans must be
allowed to invest, just as
foreigners are allowed to.
Moreover, to be consistent, this
type of stimulus should be
extended to the political realm.
It is said
that the party demands each and
everyone of its members to think
with his own head and to express
himself freely within the bosom of
the party organizations. This
means that there are 770,000
persons in the country who are
allowed to think and speak freely,
while the rest of the population—the
ones without a party; the ones
that constitute the majority—have
no opportunity to express
themselves freely. They too need
breathing space.
You may find
this a curious assertion:
"Our electoral system is
above political games, fraud, and
the buying-selling of votes."
And is this not what is to be
expected? It would, after all, be
truly mind-boggling for the party
to engage in and condone vices to
benefit candidates that already
follow the party line. It is also
stated that: "The party does
not nominate, reelect or
impeach." Clearly, it has no
need to do so. The entire
leadership of the mass
organizations belongs to the
party. It is enough that these
leaders participate in the
whole-scale nomination process of
the so-called "Candidacy
Commissions." Despite all
this, people are compelled to go
vote. For something truly novel,
they should allow the opposition
to form part of the electoral
process itself; to be able to
rally its own parties, nominate
its own candidates and engage in
political campaigning—all under
the supervision of international
observers.
The document
does speak of a constitutional
state. However, not one of the
traits that would characterize as
such is discernible. There is no
respect for the law, as
demonstrated by Decree 217, which
violates provisions of the
Constitution and the General
Housing Law. There is also the
case of the systematic disregard
of the Law Governing Associations,
under which different independent
organizations should—as they
have repeatedly requested— be
made legal.
The state is
not at the service of the
citizens. Between them there is
not even an egalitarian
relationship of reciprocal rights
and obligations. Instead, the
citizen is at the service of the
state.
The laws do
not respect the rights inherent
upon human beings, as demonstrated
by innumerable denunciations of
the violations of these rights as
well as repeated sanctions against
Cuba in the United Nations over
this issue.
The
government should resolve problems
such as the matter of the right of
Cubans to freely enter and leave
the national territory and
allowing the United Nations
Special Rapporteur for Human
Rights, and his team, into the
country. It must also be noted
that there is no legal protection
in the country, as it has been
shown that the laws, and even the
Constitution, can be modified
overnight. Thus, if other
ideologies besides that advocated
by the Communist Party were
recognized, a Constituent Assembly
should be convened with the main
goal of modifying the existing
constitution. The Constitution of
1940 could be used as a basis for
the revisions, with the subsequent
aim of holding multi-party
elections.
Measures
such as this are what the
Communist Party should propose to
try to avoid a spontaneous
outbreak in the near future of
incidents of social violence.
It is
impossible to continue leading the
nation to its ruin without
expecting an uncontrolled
awakening of the populace in
search of a rightful space within
a civil society with democratic
institutions. That which no one
desires could well occur, and thus
it is better to discuss solutions
now than to plunge our homeland
into mourning tomorrow.
Havana City,
June 27, 1997
Felix
Antonio Bonne Carcasses
Rene Gomez Manzano
Vladimiro Roca Antunez
Martha Beatriz Roque Cabello
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