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Cuba's local dissidents speak out (BBC)

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Mar 25, 2001, 4:39:59 PM3/25/01
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From: PL <P...@pandora.be>
Subject: Cuba's local dissidents speak out (BBC)
Date: Sunday, March 25, 2001 4:31 PM

Monday, 19 March, 2001, 19:44 GMT
Cuba's local dissidents speak out



Last year's UN vote was met with official protest

By Daniel Schweimler in Havana
A motion condemning Cuba's human rights record is set to be one of the key
items on the agenda for the United Nations Human Rights Commission's current
meeting in Geneva.



We need to make a hole inside this government to live, to think, to
talk...This is my country and my country needs what we do

Marta Beatriz Roque, dissident

Last year, Cuba lost a similar vote, provoking outrage from President Fidel
Castro who said the United States had bullied, cajoled and bribed other
nations into condemning his country.

When Fidel Castro came to power in 1959 many of his opponents fled, mostly
to the United States. And many dissidents have continued to leave the
country since. None are allowed back.

But some dissidents stayed in Cuba, such as Marta Beatriz Roque: "We need
enough space in our society and we are working for this. We need to make a
hole inside the government to live, to think, to talk," she said.

"We need to be here. Me in particular. I don't want to live out of my
country. This is my country and my country needs what we do."

Working for change



Marta Beatriz Roque: committed to fighting for freedom in Cuba



Many of these dissidents who have stayed in Cuba have been imprisoned. Marta
Beatriz Roque herself was released last May after three-and-a-half years in
jail.

The dissidents form a number of disparate groups across the island and they
are small in number.

They are rarely mentioned in the state-controlled media and do not have
their own newspapers, magazines or radio stations. They are constantly
monitored by the Cuban security forces.

More than 100 groups, some representing just a handful of people, are trying
to gather 10,000 signatures in order to change the Cuban constitution.



Once politics forced Cubans to flee, now economics are the main spur

They want greater freedom of speech, association and movement and the chance
to hold elections.

One of those behind the move and possibly the best known of the dissidents
still in Cuba is Elizardo Sanchez. "The majority, like the majorities in
Czechoslovakia or Bulgaria or the Romanians or the Soviet Union want to know
that change is possible in the near future. A light at the end of the
tunnel," he said.

"Something that tells them they might be able to live happier lives with
greater prosperity."



I'm not for or against foreign investment or the tourist industry, what I'm
against is the discrimination against Cubans."

Oscar Espinosa, dissident
The 40-year long economic embargo imposed on Cuba by the United States has
hit the island's economy hard.

Many expected the economy to fold in the 1990 after the collapse of the
Soviet Union which propped up the Cuban economy.

Two-tier economy

But President Fidel Castro defied the expectations of many and survived. One
change he allowed was the use of the US dollar alongside the Cuban peso.

Fruit and vegetable markets sell only in Cuban pesos. But those who have
dollars spend their dollars in modern supermarkets.

It has created a two-tier economy in which foreigners and Cubans with access
to dollars can buy more expensive but better quality, imported goods.

Since 1990, living standards have fallen dramatically


But most Cubans can buy only in pesos which gives them access to a much more
limited range of goods.

According to dissident economist Oscar Espinosa, it has created growing
resentment.

"The government knows that when a person is free economically, or at least a
little freer economically, then he has greater political freedom. So that's
why it's trying to close those openings." he said.

"There is a contrast because the foreigners here have all the
opportunities...every day the foreign investments are growing... I'm not for
or against foreign investment or the tourist industry, what I'm against is
the discrimination against Cubans."

Embargo "an abuse"

The Cuban government appears nervous about the UN vote and has attacked

President Castro rejects criticism of his government's human rights record

the countries that backed last year's motion, such as the Czech Republic and
Argentina.

While dissidents in Cuba say the state is increasing pressure on them, Cuba
accuses the dissidents of being counter-revolutionaries in the pay of the
US.

The Havana Government has always said the greatest abuse of human rights is
that caused by the US embargo which stops books reaching Cuban schools and
medicines reaching the sick.

For Cuba to defeat the motion would provide a massive boost to that
argument. The dissidents in Cuba are meanwhile looking to the UN for support
in their lonely battle,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1230000/1230078.stm

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