Acting Cuban president puts his own stamp on government



Acting Cuban president puts his own stamp on government
By Channel NewsAsia's US Correspondent, Steve Mort | Posted: 11 August 2007 1452 hrs

MIAMI: Acting Cuban President Raul Castro is beginning to put his own stamp on Cuba's communist government.

But his pledges to implement economic reforms and improve relations with the United States fall short of the dramatic political changes predicted by many Cuban exiles in Florida 12 months ago.

Many Cuban exiles residing in Miami had hoped that Fidel Castro would not live to celebrate his 81st birthday on 13 August 2007 when he was hospitalised in July last year.

But pictures showing a recovering Fidel Castro have been appearing in Cuba's state newspaper, along with his newly written essays.

Raul Castro took the ailing leader's place at the most recent National Revolution Day celebrations – the first time Fidel Castro has missed the event in 48 years.

Jamie Suchliki from the University of Miami said Raul Castro's speech indicates that the Communist Party maintains a strong grip on power.

He said: "People are afraid of him. The military is totally loyal to him – the party apparatus he controls. So he has the levers of power and the ministry of interior and the security. I think he can keep the pieces together for an indefinite period."

In Cuba, day-to-day life remains unchanged, despite predictions that Fidel Castro's illness would prompt an uprising against communist rule.

Raul Castro is even outlining his own long-term agenda, including Chinese-style economic reforms, particularly in agriculture.

He admits that food shortages and low wages mean Cubans often struggle to get by.

Cuban government statistics show that approximately 60 percent of farms are state-run, but nearly 80 percent of Cuban-produced food comes from private growers.

Paolo Spadoni from Florida's Rollins College said Raul Castro has pledged to attract foreign investment and implement "structural and conceptual changes" to fix the problem.

"Raul Castro will probably introduce some limited and gradual market reforms...so I do see some changes, but I don't see a complete and sudden change of the system," he said.

While showing a willingness to consider economic reform, Raul Castro has a reputation as a political hardliner.

But Paolo Spadoni said he has allowed limited dissent in Cuban politics since taking the helm.

"There has been a bit more political debate – debating the system, the legalities, the corruption, the shortcomings of the system – and some Cuban academics have been quoted in newspapers, providing some sort of criticism of the system. This is something new," he added.

Raul Castro has also made overtures towards the United States, even calling for talks with the US once President Bush leaves office.

Fidel and Raul's sister, Juanita Castro, lives in Miami and she believes reforms may happen even without a change in government in Havana.

She said: "Right now, Raul is the only thing that we can have at this moment. Perhaps he can produce the changes that the Cuban people need, that our country needs, in order to live in the future in democracy."

However, with little sign that Raul Castro is willing to hold democratic elections, Cuban exiles seem resigned to the fact that a transition to democracy may be many years away.


- CNA/so

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/other/view/293404/1/.html
.



Relevant Pages

  • Blogger Yoani =?windows-1252?Q?S=E1nchez_gets_by_with_a_?= =?windows-1252?Q?lot_of_help_from
    ... In Brazil, where she launched her world tour on Feb. 18 after the Cuban government granted her permission to travel, pro-Castro protesters threw fake dollar bills at the blogger and shouted she was being underwritten by the CIA. ... Her flight from the Netherlands to Miami? ... Paid for by her sister Yunia, a pharmacy tech who emigrated from Cuba two years ago, friends and supporters said. ...
    (soc.culture.cuba)
  • In Raul Castros Cuba, A Limit On New Freedoms
    ... But for those who go too far or organize against the government, the response is swift and sometimes ugly. ... In Cuba, it is the closest thing to a public protest against the government. ... Under Raul Castro, Cubans have more opportunities to vent. ... "There's no space for people who really think differently," said a Cuban bystander in a city park who said his name is Eduardo. ...
    (soc.culture.cuba)
  • Dissent Remains Outside Cubas Reforms
    ... zero political tolerance," said dissident Elizardo Sanchez, president of the Cuban Commision for Human Rights and National Reconciliation, which is illegal but tolerated by the state. ... A government statement read on the state media Monday night called the demonstration a "crude and shameful provocation" by mercenaries carrying out orders of anti-Castro forces in Miami. ... The statement said the demonstrators on Friday received a 22-minute phone call of encouragement from Florida congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Castro foe and proponent of U.S. funds intended to undermine the island's government. ... The women intended to deliver a letter addressed to Raul Castro and other officials, according to organizers and human rights observers. ...
    (soc.culture.cuba)
  • Journalists in the pay of the U.S. government turned the trial of the Five into a farce
    ... JOURNALISTS PAID BY US GOVERNMENT MAKE A MOCKERY OF THE CUBAN FIVE ... Miami journalists paid by the U.S. government were "the principal ...
    (soc.culture.cuba)
  • No Change In Cuba
    ... Raul Castro became Cuba's first new president in fifty years when he took over the reigns of power from his ailing brother, Fidel Castro, in February. ... Freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, freedom of belief and the freedom to challenge one's government peaceably remain beyond the reach of everyday Cubans, as was so brutally demonstrated in the recent suppression of ten women demonstrators in the country's capital. ... These women are the wives of men arrested in a political crackdown in 2003 that landed 75 Cuban dissidents in prison on charges of working for the U.S. government. ... The U.S. urges Cuba to release all those jailed for peacefully exercising their universally recognized human rights. ...
    (soc.culture.cuba)