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View Full Version : Cuban Dissidents seek reform - Just wondering what are peopl



alphaq
8th March 2002, 21:22
What does everyone think of this?

HAVANA, Cuba (Reuters) -- In an apparently unprecedented move during President Fidel Castro's 43-year rule, a group of dissidents says it has gathered 10,000 signatures to ask the Cuban parliament for a referendum on political reforms.

"We are proposing a consultation with the people so they decide about change," a leading moderate dissident, Oswaldo Paya, who is the main promoter of the so-called Varela Project, told Reuters late on Wednesday.

The project, named for pro-independence Catholic priest Felix Varela (1788-1853), is based on article 88 of the Cuban constitution, which says new legislation may be proposed by citizens if more than 10,000 voters support them.

he proposed referendum, Paya said, would be on the need to guarantee the rights of free expression and association; an amnesty for political prisoners; more opportunities for private business; a new electoral law; and a general election.

Havana, which scorns dissidents as "counter-revolutionary" pawns of a hostile U.S. government and anti-Castro Cuban American groups, has publicly ignored the project.

But Paya and others behind the campaign accused the government of mounting a strong campaign of "threats and persecution" to impede the gathering of signatures and delivery of letters to authorities.

"Authorities are acting like gangsters," said Paya, who has a long list of alleged verbal and physical abuse against Varela Project activists in the last year.

'Government afraid'

"The government is afraid of this liberating gesture, where a social vanguard is showing it has no fear. The government is afraid when the people are not afraid," he added.

Castro frequently says his one-party communist system is more democratic than the Western model and denies the existence of political prisoners or repression of freedom of expression.

The signatures, gathered by activists across the Caribbean island of 11 million inhabitants over the last year, will be presented to the National Assembly in a few weeks, once all 10,000 signatures have been checked and ratified, Paya said.

"This has never been done before, it has no precedent," he added. "It shows Cubans not only want changes, but also are ready to face the risks to show they want changes."

According to Paya, more than 100 small opposition groups have backed the initiative. However, some prominent dissidents, such as Martha Beatriz Roque, do not support it, arguing it is unrealistic to seek change within a constitution designed by the Castro government.

Paya did not say what Varela Project backers will do if the initiative is rejected by
the National Assembly, something analysts and diplomats think is virtually certain.

"We are ready to keep demanding our rights," he said.

Over the four decades since the 1959 revolution, Cuba's scattered and marginalized internal dissident movement has made little headway against Castro's grip on power.

Castro again scathingly lambasted dissidents this week, in a three-hour TV speech, as nonrepresentative of the Cuban people and intent on helping Washington bring Cuba into the U.S. "empire."


(Edited by alphaq at 10:23 pm on Mar. 8, 2002)

peaccenicked
8th March 2002, 21:58
''more opportunities for private business''
Castro appears to be in a no win situation, if he allows capitalist dissent, the CIA will spend millions on it.
If he does not he will be castigated as a tyrant.
But essentially socialists should take their chances with democracy and regulate against Big State interference.