Sunday, 5 February 2012

In an address to Cuba's National Assembly of People's Power on December 23, Raul Castro made the struggle against corruption a key focus of his speech, indicating that this is one of the revolutionary leadership's top priorities and vowing "to put an end to this parasitic plague" of "corrupt bureaucrats, with posts obtained through pretence and opportunism, who use the positions they still occupy to accumulate fortunes, betting on the eventual defeat of the Revolution", among others.   

He gave indications of the depth and scope of the problem and of the offensive against corruption that is now underway. He considers corruption to be "one of the principle enemies of the Revolution, much more harmful than the subversive and interventionist activities of the US government and its allies within and outside the country.

These comments would seem to vindicate Esteban Morales, a respected Cuban academic expert on US politics and race relations in Cuba. Morales was "separated" from the PCC – a disciplinary measure one step short of expulsion – after he published an April 2010 commentary titled "Corruption: The true counter-revolution?", in which he warned:
Without a doubt, it is becoming evident that there are people in positions of government and state who are girding themselves financially for when the Revolution falls, and others may have everything almost ready to transfer state-owned assets to private hands, as happened in the old USSR...[There are] corrupt officials, not at all minor, who are being discovered in very high posts and with strong connections – personal, domestic and external – generated after dozens of years occupying the same positions of power.

Morales launched a successf
ul appeal and his full PCC membership was reinstated in July.

While the Spanish text of Raul's speech has been published, there is not yet an official English translation. When one becomes available I'll post it to this blog.  

"Corruption is one of the principal enemies of the Revolution"

Extract from Raul Castro's National Assembly speech, December 23, 2011

Translation: Marce Cameron

[...] Moving on to another matter, very closely linked to the functioning of the national economy is the paramount role of contracts in the interrelations between state enterprises, budgeted entities and the non-state forms of management of social property. 

Despite having been taken up on various occasions, including in the Main Report to the Sixth Communist Party Congress and in the Economic and Social Policy Guidelines, in Guideline No. 10, in interventions in the National Assembly and in a number of meetings of the Council of Ministers, we are not seeing the necessary progress. This is reflected in the deficient situation regarding receipts and payments, with the consequent disorder in internal finances and the facilitation of criminal activities and corruption.

This is apparent, to cite just one example, in the fraudulent deliveries of agricultural products, that did not exist and were never cultivated, to the Havana produce markets. This resulted in the embezzlement of more than 12 million [non-convertible] pesos through the criminal activities of directors, functionaries and other workers of the state distribution firms, as well as peasant farmers that acted as proxies, all of whom will face administrative and criminal liabilities in correspondence with the seriousness of their deeds.

I bring this up in order to illustrate the urgent necessity for all of us in leadership positions at the various levels, from the base up to the highest posts in the country, to act with firmness in the face of indiscipline and lack of control over receipts and payments, which is one of the principle causes and contributors to crime. I am convinced that today, corruption is one of the principal enemies of the Revolution, much more harmful than the subversive and interventionist activities of the US government and its allies within and outside the country.

The office of the Comptroller [i.e. auditor] General of the Republic, the office of the Attorney General and the special branches of the Interior Ministry have been instructed to combat this scourge, with all the severity allowed for by our laws, just as we successfully dealt with incipient drug trafficking beginning in January 2003.

In this strategic battle, the degree of coordination, cohesion and rigour in confronting crime has been increased and we’re beginning to see some results, both in terms of so-called white collar crimes, committed by Cuban and foreign directors and functionaries linked to foreign trade and foreign investment, and in terms of crimes carried out by common criminals in collusion with administrative leaders and workers of state firms involved in production, transport and distribution in entities of the food industry, retail trade, food services, housing and the ministries of Basic Industry and Agriculture.

Indeed, in the agricultural sector, beginning on August 1, the fight against the theft and slaughter of livestock, and the subsequent commercialisation of the meat on the black market, was stepped up in a sensitive manner. This is a phenomenon that flourished for years with a certain impunity with serious negative consequences for both state and private producers, not only from an economic point of view but also from the moral and ethical standpoints.

The National Revolutionary Police, together with other agencies of the Interior Ministry, in close coordination with the political and mass organisations, have assumed with professionalism and a systematic approach the task of eradicating, once and for all, livestock theft in the Cuban countryside. These crimes are carried out with the complicity of the butchers, managers and specialists of state enterprises, agricultural cooperatives, peasant farmers, veterinarians and the municipal directors and other functionaries of the institution that is supposed to ensure a growing supply of meat in the country. I’m referring to the Livestock Control Agency, known by its initials, CENCOP.

It should be clarified that we’re not talking about one more campaign, as has certainly happened in the past, when actions taken to re-establish order were discontinued after a while and routinism and superficiality ensued, proving correct those who waited for everything to go back to how things were so they could continue to prosper at the expense of the wealth that belongs to our people.

I can assure you that this time the cattle thieves in Cuba are done for, just as we put an end to drug trafficking, and they will not reappear, because we are determined to carry out the directives of the government and the decisions of the Communist Party Congress. I say the same to those corrupt bureaucrats, with posts obtained through pretence and opportunism, who use the positions they still occupy to accumulate fortunes, betting on the eventual defeat of the Revolution.

This Wednesday, in the Communist Party Central Committee Plenum, we analysed in depth these factors and screened a series of documentaries and footage from the interrogations of white collar criminals. In due course these will be shown to all you compañero National Assembly deputies, and also to other leaders, in your respective provinces.

We keep in mind Fidel’s warning on November 17, 2005 in the Great Hall of Havana University, just over six years ago, in which he said that this country could destroy itself by itself, that today the enemy could not do it but we could, and it would be our fault. That’s what the leader of the Revolution said on that occasion. This is why we agreed two days ago, in the 3rd Central Committee Plenum that I just mentioned, that we would put an end to this parasitic plague.

In the name of the people and of the Revolution we warn that, within the framework of the law, we will be implacable. 

Thursday, 2 February 2012

Friendly advice from the US Embassy in Canberra -
"Q: Am I allowed to visit the United States after I've been to Cuba?
A: Entry (even with a valid visa) is determined by U.S. Immigration officials at the port of entry. You may wish to take supporting documents about the purpose of your trip."
Tim Anderson

"Cuba - Economic outlook:

Australian government, has changd its 'tune' on Cuba; this is from DFAT -
"Having averaged 10.2 per cent GDP growth for several years, growth decelerated to 1.4 per cent in 2009 following the global financial crisis and three damaging hurricanes. A renewed upward trend began in 2010, with GDP growth of 2.1 per cent, forecast to reach 3.5 per cent in 2011. Growth sectors of the economy are tourism mining, energy, telecommunications and manufacturing sectors. Offshore oil exploration is underway in association with Chinese and Norwegian investors. A new oil refinery and a tanker port are being built in anticipation of significant deposits, which if found should revitalise the Cuban economy within five years." Tim Anderson

Saturday, 28 January 2012

Por qué silencian estos muertos por huelga de hambre en cárceles, mientras difaman de Cuba?

23 Enero 2012 18 Comentarios
El pasado 3 de enero moría en una cárcel de Chicago (EEUU) una mujer que realizaba una huelga de hambre. En noviembre de 2011, tres presos varones morían en California también tras una huelga de hambre que movilizó a 12.000 prisioneros en 13 estados del país. Nada de esto fue noticia internacional, ni provocó protestas diplomáticas contra el Gobierno de EEUU.
El pasado 19 de enero, fallecía en Santiago de Cuba el recluso Wilman Villar Mendoza. Inmediatamente, los medios internacionales divulgaban la versión de la llamada “disidencia” cubana, vinculada al Gobierno de EEUU: el recluso habría fallecido por una huelga de hambre en protesta por haber sido encarcelado tras participar en una manifestación pacífica.
Esta información, repetida hasta la saciedad en los grandes medios, es absolutamente falsa. Wilman Villar Mendoza fue detenido en julio del pasado año por la agresión con lesiones a su esposa, tras una denuncia realizada por la madre de ésta. En el momento de la detención, Villar agredió con violencia a los agentes, y en noviembre fue condenado a 4 años de prisión por los delitos de desacato, atentado y resistencia.
Una vez condenado -siguiendo un patrón ya clásico en los últimos tiempos- entró en contacto con la “disidencia” cubana, con la intención de ser beneficiado por las medidas de gracia del Gobierno cubano a presos de este colectivo.
Villar fue atendido en el Hospital Clínico Quirúrgico “Doctor Juan Bruno Zayas” y falleció por las complicaciones de una neumonía severa. El Gobierno cubano asegura incluso que ni siquiera se encontraba en huelga de hambre.
En contraste con el silencio diplomático tras las citadas muertes por huelga de hambre en EEUU, las presiones diplomáticas contra Cuba tras la muerte de este preso no se han hecho esperar. El Gobierno español, por ejemplo, exigía al cubano “liberar a todos los presos políticos”. Debemos recordar que Amnistía Internacional reconoce como presos de conciencia solo a 3 personas en Cuba. Y lo hace en un comunicado publicado -por cierto- al calor de estos últimos acontecimientos, ya que la ONG no reconocía ningún preso de conciencia en la Isla desde la última excarcelación, en marzo de 2011. Organizaciones de la “disidencia” cubana financiadas por EEUU sostienen, por otro lado, que existen al menos 60 “presos políticos” en la Isla. Pero la propia agencia de noticias norteamericana Associated Press (AP), poco sospechosa de apoyar las versiones del Gobierno cubano, relataba que estas 60 personas están presas por delitos “violentos, aunque políticamente motivados, como sabotaje y secuestro de naves”. Estos son, al parecer, los “presos políticos” que reivindica el Gobierno español.
Si tomamos en consideración estos datos, los 3 presos de conciencia en Cuba son bastantes menos que los más de 100 en cárceles españolas, condenados solo por su filiación política al independentismo vasco, y que jamás participaron en acciones violentas.
También habría que recordar que en julio de 2011 fallecía en la cárcel de Teruel, en España, un preso tras cinco meses en huelga de hambre. Su muerte no produjo denuncias diplomáticas, y los escasos medios que informaron de ello lo hicieron de manera escueta y oficialista. El pasado 20 de diciembre fallecía, en el Centro de Internamiento para Extranjeros (CIE), de Madrid, una inmigrante congoleña sin papeles, por una neumonía que no le fue diagnosticada porque dicho centro carecía de servicios médicos.
Por todos estos hechos, el Gobierno cubano no ha dirigido ninguna nota de protesta al Gobierno español. ¿No es hora de que comience a hacerlo?