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Published
Wednesday, March 17, 1999, in the
Miami
Herald
Mind
Control In Cuba
Dissidents
Are Condemned
International
community mustn't tolerate regime’s repression.
The verdict wasn’t a surprise. Four
Cuban dissidents, all respected independent thinkers, were deemed
guilty by a state that fears free expression. The sentences for
Vladimiro Roca, Rene Gomez Manzano, Felix Bonne and Marta Beatriz
Roque, which ranged from 3 1/2 to 5 years, were less than what
prosecutors wanted. But they were unconscionably harsh for
“crimes” that shouldn’t be crimes at all: peaceably criticizing
Cuba’s one-party rule.
Cuba’s thought police charged The Four
with inciting sedition and tried them in secret two weeks ago. They
were condemned for publishing The Homeland Belongs to Us All, a
stirring call for change and human rights, and for talking to foreign
journalists. Yesterday marked their 20th month in jail. If there is
mercy, the regime will release them on parole for time served. Yet
that may be too much to ask of a government that labels universal
human rights as “crimes.”
As if harsh sentences weren’t clear enough, the regime also put into
effect Cuba’s newest, most extreme gag law. Called the “Law for
the Protection of the National Independence and the Economy of
Cuba,” it mandates jail terms of up to 20 years for Cubans who
collaborate with “Yanqui imperialists.” The harsh measures, of
course, are directed at Cuba’s courageous independent journalists,
such as Raul Rivero. But under their vague terms practically anyone is
susceptible -- perhaps
even Cuban baseball players and musicians slated to participate in
people-to-people events with their US counterparts in Havana on March
28.
Finally, though, the message is getting
through to the world that too long has seen Cuba’s regime as a
romantic anachronism. There is nothing romantic in a despot, his
communist rhetoric and his government that disrespects universal human
rights. Thus, Canada is reevaluating its cozy relations with Cuba.
Spain’s President Jose Maria Aznar deplored the country’s “grave
retrogression.” Ibero-American heads of states are having second
thoughts about a November summit in Cuba. Good.
Both President Clinton and Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright condemned The Four’s punishment. The United
States commendably vows to push the United Nations Human Rights
Commission, which soon meets in Geneva, also to condemn Cuba’s
despotism This year, may it be so.
Copyright
2000 the Miami Herald.
Republished here with the permission of the Miami Herald. No further
republication or redistribution is permitted without the written
approval of The Miami Herald.
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