|
Parallel to the Summit of the Americas held in L.A (June 8-10) |
Dear People's Summit organizers and participants,
This open letter does not address the charges leveled in your political platform or in your final declaration against the United States. The U.S. government can fend for itself, and I am not here to represent it. In the spirit of dialogue I am responding to a number of statements, and await your concrete response, and hope that this does not degenerate into ad hominem attacks.
However, you raise a number of claims and then omit pressing challenges in this hemisphere to values and objectives that you claim to share that are caused by others.
You also confuse the peoples of Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela with the dictatorships that oppress them.
In the final document for the Summit of the Americas, "The People of the Americas have the Last Word: Final Declaration of the People’s Summit for Democracy" you made the following statement.
"The exclusion of Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua have already made Biden’s summit a political disaster; we add that this exclusion does not speak for the working class and people of conscience of this country who desire friendship and dialogue with all the peoples of our hemisphere."
It was surprising to see many of you on repeated occasions advocating for the dictatorships of Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela to participate in the Summit of the Americas, and especially citing the issue of sovereignty.
The
people's in Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela have had their sovereignty
and rights usurped by dictatorships. Dissidents that better represent
these peoples were present at the Summit of the Americas, but you refused to recognize or acknowledge their legitimacy.
I am familiar with the role the Cuban dictatorship has played, and continues to play both on the island and in this hemisphere with profoundly negative impacts. There are a number of policies, laws, and actions carried out by Havana, and their satellite regimes in Managua and Caracas, that clash with both your values and announced policy objectives.
This reality was seen across Cuba between July 11 - 13, 2021 when tens of thousands of Cubans
nonviolently marched in the streets across the island calling for an end to dictatorship, and for freedom. Mr. Diaz Canel gave the order calling on communists to take to the streets. Police and paramilitaries used
deadly force against the protesters.
A full accounting of the dead and wounded was never obtained. This was followed by mass arrests, new laws tightening censorship, and terrorizing the families of the jailed to scrub their social media of evidence. Family members who continued to defend their loved ones faced persecution, detentions, and prison.
In your final statement you also fail to address the role played by the Chinese and Russian Empires in this hemisphere to undermine democracies, or the current imperialist war waged by Moscow in Ukraine, and the role Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela are playing in backing Mr. Putin's imperialist venture.
Equally troubling is the silence around the glaringly negative roles played by the dictatorships in Havana, Managua, and Caracas to eight of your ten announced values and objectives.
Below are brief, and documented examples that deserve your scrutiny.
Cordially,
John
1. The need to fight together against white supremacy and the violent forces who wage a daily war against Black, Latino, Asian, Arab, Indigenous & Migrant communities in the US and abroad.
Cuba
The Castro regime enthroned and legitimized white supremacy in Cuba with a bearded white savior who sillenced black dissent. Cuban black nationalist Juan René Betancourt in his essay "Castro and the Cuban Negro" published in the NAACP publication The Crisis in 1961.
“Of the 256 Negro societies in Cuba, many have had to close their
doors and others are in death agony. One can truthfully say, and this is
without the slightest exaggeration, that the Negro movement in Cuba
died at the hands of Sr. Fidel Castro.” … “Yet this is the man who had
the cynical impudence to visit the United States in 1960 for the purpose
of censuring American racial discrimination. Although this evil
obviously exists in the United States, Castro is not precisely the man
to offer America solutions, nor even to pass judgement.”
Between 1898 and 1959 the relationship between Black-Americans and
Black-Cubans was based on their being part of an international black
diaspora. This relationship ended when the Castro regime ended
autonomous black civil society in 1962, and consolidated totalitarian
rule.
It was replaced by Castro and his white revolutionary elite allying with
Black elites in the United States, and Africa while criticizing racism
in the United States. This ended black agency in Cuba for decades,
replaced with a policy based in obedience, submission, and gratitude to
the white revolutionary elite, and this was reflected in official
propaganda with racist tropes.
The elimination of Afro-Cubans from this dynamic by the new communist revolutionary elite turned racism into a political tool outside of Cuba
to advance the Castro regime's communist agenda, but turned it into a
taboo topic by ungrateful blacks, labeled counter-revolutionaries by the
dictatorship.
Cuban blacks today that would have been political leaders in the 1940s and 1950s are dissidents persecuted, hunted and killed by the secret police.
Based on the Institute for Crime and Justice Policy Research, according to the January 13, 2020 article by EuropaPress, Cuba today has the largest per capita prison population in the world. Although official data is unavailable, it is known that a disproportionate number are Black Cubans.
On March 22, 1959 Fidel Castro declared that racism no longer existed in
Cuba, to question that was to be a counter-revolutionary. The regime
claimed over the next six decades that there is no racism in Cuba while poverty disproportionately impacts black Cubans with 95% having the lowest incomes compared to 58% of white Cubans, after six decades of communism, and independent black voices continue to be silenced.
Nicaragua
3,000 Indigenous people have been forced off their land in Nicaragua by invaders since 2015. Dozens of indigenous people have been killed since 2021 in Nicaragua, and Ortega is blamed for not protecting them.
Venezuela
"Between 2016 and 2019, police and security forces killed more than
19,000 people, alleging “resistance to authority.” [ The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)], analyzing open
sources, found 2,000 individuals had been killed in security operations
between January and August of 2020. Many of these deaths may constitute
extrajudicial executions, according to OHCHR," reported Human Rights Watch in 2021.
2. The right of workers to collectively bargain and organize unions without interference, intimidation, or retaliation from employers. Workers around the hemisphere are organizing for better conditions on the job in face of deteriorating wages, benefits, and safety conditions—exacerbated by the Covid-19 Pandemic.
Over 120 workers and trade unionists are jailed today in Cuba reports the Asociación Sindical Independiente de Cuba ( Independent Trade Union Association of Cuba ) in a "Declaration for May First" published on April 30, 2022.
However, the fact is that Fidel Castro and the communist dictatorship
that he imposed in Cuba destroyed Cuba's national independent labor
movement, and replaced it with one controlled by the communist
dictatorship that does not permit strikes, or collective bargaining by
workers.
You need not take my word for it, you should take the
word of Cuban workers suffering under the communist dictatorship in
Cuba, but you cannot ignore the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) which is the global voice of the world’s working people, and "represents 200 million workers in 163 countries and territories and has 332 national affiliates."
This is what they have to report about Cuba.
New government reform programme31-12-2011
The government violates the right to collective bargaining, freedom of association
and the independent representation of workers. It has decided to make
mass redundancies, leaving hundreds of thousands of people jobless, and
announced tougher repressive and disciplinary measures in the workplace.
It is trying to develop a model that preserves the essence of the
system, i.e. collectivism, state ownership of the means of production,
centralised decision making, planning and prohibition of the individual
accumulation of wealth, at the same time as demanding greater
productivity from companies and workers, and denying economic, political
and cultural freedom through increased control and repression.
According to the Plenary of the National Council of the CTC, “we have
to show the world that the workers, the backbone of our society, will
forge ahead until the economic situation has been overcome, certain that
they are taking the only correct and just path possible”. Salvador
Valdés, general secretary of the CTC, underlined the need to ensure that
the 2011 Plan draws on the lessons of 2010: “The major economic
challenges facing the country require the trade union movement to change
its methods and approaches, to act as a healthy counterbalance to the
violations and transgressions that may arise with the implementation of
the changes”.
The initial results of this process demonstrate that, despite the
prior preparation for these changes, there are still problems that need
to be resolved. Although this is a predominantly administrative process,
the union cannot be neutral and must be the first to ensure that
workers are given the help they need and are not abandoned.
Repression stifles labour rights 30-11-2011
The number of politically-motivated arrests was
estimated to have reached 1,224 in November 2010, which discourages the
formation of independent trade unions, as the authorities view
exercising freedom of association as a political activity.
Political legislation overrides trade union laws 31-12-2010
There have been no changes in the Cuban labour
legislation. The trade union movement is controlled by the Cuban state,
and the leaders of the single union CTC are not elected by the workers
but appointed by the state and the Communist Party of Cuba.
Workers’ rights violations persist 10-06-2009
On 10 June, the former political prisoner José
Ramón Castillo denounced various trade union rights violations in Cuba
to the United Nations Human Rights Council. Amnesty International had
declared him a prisoner of conscience and he testified before this forum
as a victim of repression in Cuba. He stated that Cuban workers’ right
to self-determination is not respected on the island. Workers do not
have the right to organise trade unions independent of the state and
five Cubans are currently serving prison sentences for having tried to
organise independent trade unions. This information has been widely
documented by the relevant international institutions.
[ Source: https://survey.ituc-csi.org/Cuba.html?lang=en#tabs-3]
3. Full amnesty and rights for all immigrants. As a consequence of war, neo-liberal free-trade policies, and foreign-occupation on Global South countries, people are forced to uproot their lives and flee their homelands.
Communist regimes have a poor track record in dealing with migrants. The Castro regime has a track record of killing fleeing Cuban refugees that the People's Summit has ignored.
The Miami Herald on July 7, 1993 reported on Castro regime officials butchering fleeing refugees:
Cuban marine patrols, determined to stop refugees from reaching the U.S.
Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, have repeatedly tossed grenades and shot at
fleeing swimmers and recovered some bodies with gaff hooks, U.S. officials
charged Tuesday. At least three Cubans have been killed in the past month as Cuban patrol
boats attacked swimmers within sight of U.S. Navy personnel at Guantanamo.
* On June 19 at 2 p.m., U.S. guards, startled by the sounds of
detonations, saw Cuban troops aboard patrol boats dropping grenades in the
paths of several swimmers headed for the U.S. base.
* On June 20 at 1:30 p.m., Cuban troops repeated the action, then strafed
the water with machine-gun fire.
* On June 26 at 11 a.m., three patrol boats surrounded a group of
swimmers, lobbing grenades and spraying them with automatic weapons fire. At
least three corpses were lifted out of the water with gaffs.
* On June 27 at 11:30 a.m., guards aboard patrol boats lobbed two
grenades into the water.
* The same day, just before 3 p.m., a patrol boat opened automatic fire
on a group of swimmers, who were later seen being pulled from the water. The
swimmers' status was unknown.
On July 13, 1994 the tugboat "13 de marzo" was surrounded, attacked and sunk by regime agents in a massacre that killed 37 Cuban refugees, the majority women and children.
Human rights defenders who attempted to quantify the numbers of dead or
missing refugees were targeted by state security and made a cautionary
example. Francisco Chaviano González, a former mathematics teacher, and
human
rights defender was the president of the National Council for Civil
Rights in Cuba (Consejo
Nacional por los Derechos Civiles en Cuba - CNDCC), an organization whose work included
"documenting the cases of Cubans who have been lost at sea trying to
leave the country."
Chaviano was trying to investigate the cases of a number of Cubans who had gone missing. He was warned by state security
to stop his human rights work or he would be arrested and sentenced to
15 years in prison. He refused to leave and was detained on May 7, 1994, drugged and
subjected to a military trial and sentenced to 15 years in prison of
which he served over 13 years in terrible conditions suffering numerous
beatings and the denial of healthcare which led to a wholesale decline
in his health. Amnesty International recognized Chaviano as a prisoner of conscience. Chaviano was released on August 10, 2007. He was forced into exile in 2012.
Castro was inspired by East Germany's brutal treatment of fleeing migrants
Celebrated border guards killing fleeing migrants. Fidel Castro visited Berlin in 1972 and addressed the border guards that policed the
Berlin Wall to prevent East Germans from escaping to the West. At Brandenburg gate on June 14, 1972 in the afternoon he addressed the men charged with shooting East Germans fleeing to West Germany as "the courageous and self-denying border guards of the GDR People's Army who stand guard in the front line of the entire-socialist community." Later in the evening Premier Castro addressed the Nikolay Bezarin Barracks in East Berlin:
It is very important to know that the people of the GDR have great confidence in you, that they are truly proud of you. The comrades of the party and the citizens of socialist Berlin have told us with great satisfaction about the activity of the border troops, speaking with great admiration for you and for your services.
4. For a future of collective liberation that is free of discrimination, harassment and violence against Women, Trans, Intersex, Queer and Gender Nonconforming People. Cuba
On March 13, 1963 Fidel Castro gave a speech were he openly attacked “long-haired
layabouts, the children of bourgeois families,” roaming the streets
wearing “trousers that are too tight,” carrying guitars to look like
Elvis Presley, who took “their licentious behavior to the extreme” of organizing “effeminate shows” in public places. The Cuban dictator warned: “They should not
confuse the Revolution’s serenity and tranquility with weaknesses in
the Revolution. Our society cannot accept these degenerates.”
Both Gays, and rock n rollers were sent to forced labor camps.
We would never come to believe that a homosexual could embody the
conditions and requirements of conduct that would enable us to consider
him a true revolutionary, a true communist militant.” ... A deviation of
that nature clashes with the concept we have of what a militant
communist should be.” - Fidel Castro, 1965
The 1986-1997
quarantine of HIV-positive Cubans must be considered in this context. Furthermore, claims that AIDS
rates are lower in Cuba should be met with skepticism when considering
the dictatorship’s failure to accurately report outbreaks.
Cuban biologist, environmental activist, and Gay man, Dr. Ariel
Ruiz Urquiola, documented his case to the International Society for
Human Rights (ISHR)
in Frankfurt, Germany, where he denounced how agents of the Castro
regime purposefully infected him with HIV in 2018.
After a staged assault of two policemen Ariel Ruiz Urquiola was
arrested on May 3rd, 2018 and sentenced to prison for twelve months by a
kangaroo tribunal. He was remanded in jail on May 8th, 2018 and
protested from June 16th to July 2nd with a successful hunger strike
which led to an early release from prison on July 3rd, 2018. On June
16th, 2019 he got informed that he is HIV positive. He eliminates a
natural infection strictly. He believes that he had been infected with
the HI virus on purpose in prison.
According to a statement of Dr. Ruiz Urquiola the doctor’s reports
show that he got infected during his imprisonment. The lab results also
confirm an infection on purpose. That’s how the short time between
hospitalization and illness with a high inoculum (infective material or
one as an antigen acting part of a germ), e.g. from a lab virus, can be
explained.
Castro apologists claimed that the Cuban
dictatorship had changed since then, but on May 11, 2019 when Gay activists began their Pride March it was violently shut down by Castro regime regime agents.
5. The right of access to adequate housing, food, and healthcare. These are the most basic rights needed to guarantee a decent and dignified life and are increasingly being eroded.
Demanding adequate housing in Cuba is a punishable offense.
Silverio Portal Contreras was sentenced to four years in prison for alleged crimes of "public disorder" and "contempt" after leading several public protests demanding decent housing for all Cubans. He was detained on June 20, 2016 in Havana and the court document states that "the behavior of the accused is particularly offensive because it took place in a touristic area." The document further describes the accused as having “bad social and moral behavior” and mentions that he fails to participate in pro-government activities. According to Silverio’s wife, before his arrest he had campaigned against the collapse of dilapidated buildings in Havana. Silverio was recognized as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International on August 26, 2019. He was beaten by prison officials in mid-May 2020 and lost sight in one eye, and spent 2 years and 9 months unjustly imprisoned. He suffered a stroke during his imprisonment and is now in fragile health.
Government officials, who jailed Silverio, did not heed his warnings regarding dilapidated buildings. On January 27, 2020 three school girls died when a balcony collapsed on them in Old Havana. María Karla Fuentes and Lisnavy Valdés Rodríguez, both 12 years old, and Rocío García Nápoles, 11 years old were killed.
Although buildings housing Cubans are in disrepair and collapsing the Castro regime is in the midst of a construction boom, for luxury tourist hotels.
Reality of Cuba's healthcare system
Cuba has a two tiered health care system
one tier for the nomenklatura and foreign tourists with hard currency
that offers care with modern equipment and fully stocked pharmacies,
then there is a second tier which is for the rest with broken down
equipment, run down buildings and rooms, scarce supplies, a lack of
hygiene, the denial of certain services and lengthy wait times.
Healthcare professionals are poorly paid and lack food.
There are serious consequences for travelers to Cuba when they are not properly informed with what to expect with Cuba's public health failures and the disastrous state of Cuban healthcare. Not to mention a hefty bill for catching Cholera while on vacation, or worse yet discovering that you had been exposed to Zika virus when your child is born with microcephaly, a serious birth defect.
Venezuela - burned humanitarian aide in 2018, and shipped tons to Cuba as Venezuelans starved.
Nicolas Maduro, the former president of Venezuela, ordered troops to burn humanitarian aid in 2019. The usurper claims that humanitarian assistance is an existential threat and provocation to his regime. This claim is also backed by the Castro regime. However, they are not being honest about the real nature of the threat.
Maduro, along with the Castro regime, are attempting to install a
communist dictatorship in Venezuela. One of the instruments that
communist regimes have used to subjugate populations is famine and
rationing food to those who are loyal and denying it to those who are
not.
In the case of Venezuela,
Chávez and Maduro destroyed the market in food by imposing price
controls "that resulted in underproduction when the official prices did
not
meet costs of production. Their governments expropriated farms,
ranches, and even food distributors such as butchers. There’s very
little if anything produced on these expropriated territories." Rhoda Howard-Hassmann's article "Famine in Venezuela" published on August 21, 2018 in the World Peace Foundation reports:
"By 2017 malnutrition was
confirmed in Venezuela, precipitating the political unrest now roiling
the country. According to Antulio Rosales (“Weaponizing Hunger is a New Low for the Venezuelan President,” Globe and Mail, March 12, 2018, p.A11) and Enrique Krauze (“Hell of a Fiesta,” New York Review of Books,
March 8, 2018, pp. 4-7), by early 2018 more than half of all
Venezuelans had lost between 19 and 24 pounds, and 90 per cent said they
do not have enough money for food."
TRT World's Ediz Tiyansan
reporting from Caracas on December 30, 2018 published the article "
Child malnutrition on the rise in Venezuela" that reveals that levels of hunger in Venezuela are that of a famine.
"The World Health Organisation says, a country with 10% of its children
with malnutrition is at risk, at 12% it's considered famine. In
Venezuela, a recent study conducted in five different states shows that
we're at 14.8%," says Huniades Urbina, President of Venezuela's
Childcare and Pediatrics Society.
Despite this
reality, on February 4, 2018 Maduro
shipped 100 tons of aid to Cuba and on February 6, 2018 Maduro,
once again, ordered humanitarian shipments of aid
to be blocked from
entering Venezuela. Maduro continues to double down and block aid, or actually destroy it when it enters Venezuela.
Politicized public health
Cuba has covered up epidemics in the past targeting doctors and journalists who speak out. In 1997 a Cuban doctor was silenced for warning about a deadly dengue
epidemic. Dr Desi Mendoza Rivero, married with four children at the
time, was arrested on June 25, 1997. On November 28, 1997 he was sentenced to eight years in prison for "enemy propaganda." Amnesty International declared Dr. Mendoza Rivero a prisoner of conscience and campaigned for his freedom. He was released on
November 20, 1998 due to health reasons following the visit of the
Spanish Foreign Minister, under the condition that he leave Cuba for
exile in Spain.
First official report to the World Health Organization of the dengue outbreak was six months after initial identification made by the jailed and later forcibly exiled physician. Mendoza Rivero's reports were eventually confirmed. This episode would have a chilling effect on other doctors coming forward.
News of a cholera outbreak in Manzanillo, in the east of the island, broke in El Nuevo Herald
on June 29, 2012 thanks to the reporting of an independent reporter in
the island. Calixto Martinez, the independent Cuban journalist who broke
the story was jailed. The state controlled media did not confirm the outbreak until days later on July 3, 2012. The BBC reported on July 7, 2012 that a patient had been diagnosed with cholera in Havana. The Cuban government stated that it had it under control and on August 28, 2012 said the outbreak was over.
In July 2013 an Italian tourist returned from Cuba with severe renal failure due to cholera. New York high school teacher Alfredo Gómez contracted cholera during a family visit to Havana during the summer of 2013 and was billed $4,700 from the government hospital. A total of 12 tourists were identified who had contracted cholera in Cuba. On August 22, 2013 Reuters reported that Cuba was still struggling with cholera outbreaks in various provinces.
6. To end racist police violence and mass incarceration, and free all political prisoners. Racist policing and mass incarceration are tools to enforce white supremacy. The US prison industrial complex, which incarcerates 25 percent of the world’s prisoners, must be dismantled.
Cuba
The International Committee of the Red Cross has not been allowed in Cuban prisons since 1989,
and that was a brief period between 1988-1989. In comparison, the
prison for Al Qaeda prisoners at the U.S. Guantanamo Naval Base had over
100 visits between 2002 and 2014, and have continued to the present
date.
Cuba is the only country in the Americas where Amnesty
International, Human Rights Watch, and other international and regional
human rights organizations are unable to visit.
We are deeply concerned with the plight of political prisoners such as Virgilio Mantilla Arango, Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara, Maykel Castillo Pérez (Osorbo), and their health status. It is also no coincidence that all are black Cubans.
These and other cases raise questions on the racist nature of the Castro regime.
Based on the Institute for Crime and Justice Policy Research, according to the January 13, 2020 article by EuropaPress, Cuba today has the largest per capita prison population in the world. Although official data is unavailable, it is known that a disproportionate number are Black Cubans.
Venezuela
Venezuela in 2022 is the country with the highest per capita killings by the police of civilians in the world. (Nicaragua was fifth, and the United States was 33rd.)
9. The right of sovereign nations to decide their own policies and forms of government without foreign interference. The peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean have been subjected to coups, sanctions, and invasions when their policies don’t align with US interests. This contradicts the basic rights of sovereignty and independence.
Cuba
Fidel Castro, secretly a communist since at least 1950, lied to Cubans and the world that he would restore the 1940 Constitution and democracy
in Cuba. Castro arrived in Havana in January of 1959 and immediately
set upon consolidating power and erecting a totalitarian, communist
dictatorship. On December 2, 1961 Castro explained the reason for the lie: "If we had paused to tell the people that we were Marxist-Leninists
while we were on Pico Turquino and not yet strong, it is possible that
we would never have been able to descend to the plains."
Cubans did not vote the Castros into power, nor did Cubans in 1959 support the imposition of a communist system. Fidel Castro lied about it, and used political terror and firing squads to set up the police state that has endured for 63 years jailing and killing many Cubans, with a disproportionate number being black Cubans. This has denied Cubans their sovereignty for seventy years, beginning with Batista's coup against Cuban democracy on March 10, 1952.
NicaraguaThe Castro regime overthrew one government in Latin America with armed interventions: the overthrow of the Somoza regime in Nicaragua and the installation of the Marxist-Leninist Sandinista regime led by Daniel Ortega. Robert A. Pastor, in the July 1992 report "The Carter
Administration and Latin America: A Test of Principle" explained the role played by Havana in the Sandinista victory
in Nicaragua, "by
May 1979, with Cuban President Fidel Castro's help, the three
Sandinista factions had united and established a secure and ample arms
flow from Cuba through Panama and Costa Rica." The Sandinistas drove out the Somoza regime on July 19, 1979 and would remain a force there to the present day.
Since popular street protests turned against Ortega’s government in April 2018, the dictatorship has cancelled more than 400 civil society organizations, denying Nicaraguans' right to organize. Amnesty International reported at "least 325 dead and more than 2,000 injured" during and in the aftermath of the April 2018 protests. Many of the victims were students.
Venezuela
Castro regime's interest in Venezuela began from the earliest days of the dictatorship. Venezuelans understood the threat poised by the
Cubans by 1960 when Ernesto "Che" Guevara was giving unsolicited advice
to Rómulo Betancourt, the democratically elected president of
Venezuela. Guevara called for Betancourt to use the firing squad against
his "rightist opponents."
The Venezuelan president "believed that trade and
diplomatic relations should be broken with the governments that came to
power through coups, regardless of whether they were left or right.
Thus, in 1961, Venezuela broke relations with Cuba and became one of the promoters of the exclusion of the island from the OAS, which was achieved in January 1962."
In 1963 Congressional Quarterly reported on how:
"Riots led by Communists and other pro-Castro elements in Caracas [in the
autumn of 1960] took the lives of 13 persons and injured 100. Venezuela recalled
its ambassador to Cuba, and Betancourt ordered out the army to end the
rioting, which he termed an attempt to “install a regime similar to that
in Cuba.”
Cuban Communist leader Blas Roca,
told a Havana rally on January 23, 1963 that when the communists gained full control and “make themselves owners of the great
riches in oil, aluminum and everything their earth imprisons, then all
of America shall burn.”
A cache of three tons of weapons was found on a Venezuelan beach in November
1963 that was to be used to disrupt the democratic elections there.
Fidel Castro would continue to agitate for revolution in Venezuela. On May 8, 1967
Francisco Toro reported in
The Washington Post how:
"two small boats carrying a dozen heavily armed fighters made landfall
near Machurucuto, a tiny fishing village 100 miles east of the
Venezuelan capital, Caracas. Their plan was to march inland and recruit
Venezuelan peasants to the cause of socialist revolution." An all night
gun battle with the Venezuelan military led to nine guerrillas dead, two
captured, and one who had escaped.
This led, at first, to American governments seeking to isolate Cuba in order to protect themselves from armed expeditions.
Failing to violently overthrow Venezuela's democracy, Fidel Castro publicly renounced the exportation of revolution (although he continued the practice -- see Nicaragua) and began making overtures to the Venezuelan government.
Venezuelan democrats forgot the nature of the Castro regime.
Diplomatic relations were restored between Venezuela and Cuba
in December of 1974, oil deliveries resumed, and the democratic government of Venezuela under
Carlos Andres Perez's first presidency advocated Cuba's readmission to the Organization of American States.
At the start of his second presidency (
1988 - 1993), Carlos Andres Perez invited Fidel Castro to his
inauguration.
President Caldera, who had
pardoned Chavez, handed power over to him in 1999. Together with Fidel
Castro, as a mentor, Chavez began the process of
turning a flawed democratic order into
the totalitarian regime it is today.
Official channels announced that Hugo Chavez died on March 5, 2013 and was replaced by Nicolas Maduro,
a hardcore communist, an individual who spent a lot of time
in his early 20s in Cuba being trained by the Union of Young Communists and Pedro Miret, an official close to Fidel Castro.
Africa
Castroism's
foreign interference in two African nations. There were others, but for
the sake of brevity highlighting Ethiopia and Angola.
Ethiopia
There
was one African nation that did not succumb to European colonialism and
maintained its independence, and fought against Italian fascism in the
1930s. Ethiopia was ruled by an African monarchy with a lineage directly
traced back to the 13th century, and possibly further back to Biblical
times that was overthrown by Russian and Cuban backed communists on
September 12, 1974 and replaced by a communist military junta called the
Derg that carried out a red terror to consolidate its rule.
The Cuban dictatorship took part in a genocide in Ethiopia with their ally and convicted war criminal Mengistu Haile Mariam. Fidel and Raul Castro sent 17,000 Cuban troops to Eastern Africa in order to assist Mengistu in consolidating his rule and eliminating actual and potential opposition. Mengistu was backed by the Castros throughout the 1970s and 1980s. The last Cuban troops did not leave Ethiopia until 1989 and were present and complicit in the war crimes and engineered famine that took place there.
Conservative estimate by Tufts University places the number of Ethiopians killed by Mengistu and his Cuban communist allies are between 225,000 and 317,000 Africans slaughtered.
Angola
In Angola, Cuban troops in May 1977 took part in a massacre not long after independence following
a split in the governing Communist MPLA party. Amnesty International
says 30,000 died in the purge others say as many as 90,000 killed.
There is much more to Cuban involvement in Africa, but am focusing on two examples of foreign interference, and coups.
10. The need to end the deadly sanctions against the countries of Latin America as well as to lift the criminal blockade against Cuba. Sanctions are a form of war against civilian populations. During the Pandemic, sanctioned countries have been prevented from purchasing adequate medical supplies. Sanctions and blockades do great harm to ordinary people.
There is a reason for the absence of food in Cuba, and overall scarcity, but it is not sanctions According to the Cuban Studies Institute between 1952-1958 Cuba
achieved "agricultural self-sufficiency to supply the people’s market
demand for food." Despite the efforts to violently overthrow the Batista
regime in the 1950s, "the Cuban food supply grew steadily to provide a
highly productive system that, in daily calories consumption, ranked
Cuba third in Latin America."This ended when the Castro regime took
power, seized and collectivized properties,
and prohibited farmers selling their crops to non-state entities, in
the early years of the revolution.
Farmers no longer decided how much to
produce, or what price to sell. The Communist Cuban government established production quotas and farmers were (and are) obligated to sell to the state collection agency, called Acopio. Most recent law on agriculture in Cuba ( Decreto Ley 358 de 2018) continues to prohibit private sales of agricultural products to non-state entities. The dictatorship began rationing food in 1962 as a method of control and continued the practice over the next six decades. Rationed food is not free, but sold at subsidized prices. Rationed items are not enough to feed a person.
Over six decades to the present day, between 70% and 80% of Cuba's food has and continues to be imported. This included the years when Cuba was heavily subsidized by the Soviet Union, and was part of the East Bloc. Since 2000, much of the food purchased by Havana has been imported from the United States. Despite this, rationing continued during the peak years (2011 - 2014) when the Cuban government received massive amounts of assistance from Venezuela's Chavez regime. What about Cuba's domestic agricultural production? Diario de Cuba in their February 7, 2022 article, "Cubans go hungry and Acopio leaves 22 tons of tomatoes to rot, farmers denounce," cites Cuban agronomist Fernando Funes-Monzote who stated that "Cuban agriculture does not need to produce more food," because "50% of what is grown today is lost before reaching the consumer."
This is part of the "internal blockade" that thousands of Cubans have referred to, and signed a petition calling for its end.
The Castro regime continues to call the United States economic embargo on Cuba a "blockade." This is not true as the State Department (and U.S. - Cuba trade statistics over the past 22 years) demonstrate. The United States does not have a "blockade" on Cuba, but porous economic sanctions with a focus on cutting off funds to the military that controls most of the Cuban economy. The United States in 2020 was the third largest exporter of agricultural goods and supplies to Cuba. Remittances continue to flood Cuba from the Cuban exile community in South Florida, but now also in Euros due to new restrictions imposed by the Castro regime on June 21, 2021 against the dollar.
Agence France Presse (AFP) reported on February 6, 2022 that Cuba on February 5, 2022 announced a new 10 per cent tax on retail food sales, as the country endures economic woes marked by rampant inflation. The levy took effect on February 7, 2022 targeting self-employed people and small- and medium-sized companies in the retail food sector. These sales were only allowed starting in August 2021 as part of reforms in the communist-run island. Cuban economist Pedro Monreal wrote on Twitter that the new tax will probably have two effects: "higher food prices and more inequality among the Cuban people."