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Tuesday, January 24, 2006

U.S. diplomats in Havana flash messages to Cuban protesters outside...

Posted on Tue, Jan. 24, 2006

U.S. diplomats in Havana flash messages to Cuban protesters outside...

By FRANCES ROBLES
frobles@MiamiHerald.com

U.S. diplomats in Havana flash messages to Cuban protesters outside as Fidel Castro addresses the government-sponsored march.
Havana's billboard war saw more salvos fired Tuesday as the U.S. and Cuban governments stoked their decades-old confrontation with competing messages.
Cuban leader Fidel Castro shepherded about one million people to a protest outside the U.S. diplomatic mission in the Cuban capital in one of his government's periodic immense protests against Washington.
But just as the 79-year-old leader was about to speak to the masses, American diplomats couldn't resist taking advantage of a captive audience and lit up the electronic ticker-tape billboard recently displayed on the side of the building.
''To those who may want to be here, we respect your protest. To those who don't want to be here, excuse the bother,'' the sign declared in a subtle reference to the strong government pressures that ensure attendance at such protests is high.
The sign was the latest in an a public relations battle between Cuba and the diplomatic mission, officially known as the U.S. Interests Section, each using billboards and displays to mock the other.
''To help Cubans shuck off their propaganda straight jacket, we have creatively used new measures to dialogue with them -- and the streaming, electronic billboard is just our latest initiative,'' U.S. Interests Section chief Michael Parmly said in an e-mail to the Miami Herald. ``Our goal is to show Cubans that other long-repressed people have realized their democratic aspirations.''
Another of the billboard's messages Tuesday read, ``Only in totalitarian societies do governments talk and talk at their people and never listen.''
Castro was clearly irked by the billboard, calling it another ''provocation'' aimed at forcing a total break in U.S.-Cuba relations.
''They turned on the little sign. How brave the cockroaches are,'' Castro retorted. ``Looks like Bushecito gave the order.''
Castro called for the ''March of the People'' two days ago to protest the U.S. refusal to extradite Luis Posada Carriles, a Cuban exile accused in a 1976 bombing of a Havana airliner that killed 73. Lasting seven hours and led by former Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, it was one of largest such marches in recent years.
''They are beaten. Injustice is on its knees,'' Cuba's government newspaper Granma quoted Castro as telling the crowd. ``Nobody believes in the empire.''
Organized by school, work and military groups, the marchers waved little red, white and blue Cuban flags and signs showing Posada's face in a triangle above the words ''Danger: Murderer,'' news agencies reported from Havana. They chanted ``Bush: fascist! Condemn the terrorist!''
Posada was acquitted by a Venezuelan court in the Cuban airliner explosion, but escaped from prison while awaiting a government appeal. He was captured in Miami last year and is being held in Texas by an immigration court; Tuesday was the last day for evidence to be presented in his efforts to win his freedom.
''We don't want revenge, we just want justice,'' marcher Lucía Roja, a retired educator, told the Associated Press.
Marchers like Roja were able to see the U.S. billboard messages, including the news that the U.S. Treasury Department had decided to allow Cuba to play in the upcoming World Baseball Classic tournament. They also saw quotes from Lech Walesa, Mahatma Gandhi and Abraham Lincoln.
''Only such regimes would be outraged by the sayings of Martin Luther King, Vaclav Havel and Gandhi,'' Parmly said.
A U.S. official who requested anonymity, because he was not authorized to be quoted by name said Tuesday's use of the sign was common sense: ``If the point is to reach people, why not turn it on when a million people are cruising by?''
The official said the messages deliberately include bad news for the United States, in an attempt to show Cuban people that the U.S. government does not censor the media. The U.S. Interests Section would not say how much the billboard cost. Max Lesnick, an anti-embargo Cuban activist who held a protest in Miami last week urging Posada's extradition, blasted the American billboard as a provocation.
''It makes no sense to dedicate oneself to acts of propaganda that can be seen as hostile,'' Lesnick said. ``Diplomacy is based on dialogue, not confrontation.''
The billboard follows a large sign showing the number ''75'' hung last year from the building's facade as a reference to the 75 Cuban dissidents jailed in 2003.
The Cuban government retaliated with enormous murals, displayed near the U.S. diplomatic center, of U.S. soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners.
Other billboards set up around the American mission showed bloody brass knuckles, bullets and meat hooks stamped with ''Posada & Bush Company.'' Another poster showed the faces of Bush and Hitler with an equal sign pointing to Posada's face, the AP report said.
According to an Associated Press report, the prison abuse sign -- including one with a swastika bearing a ''Made in the U.S.A.'' stamp -- were removed this week and replaced with what appeared to be a movie poster showing Bush and Posada with vampire teeth and blood in their mouths.
The sign purported to advertise an upcoming film dubbed ''The Murderer'' -- ``coming soon to American courts.''
Other billboards set up around the American mission showed bloody brass knuckles, bullets and meat hooks stamped with ''Posada & Bush Company.'' Another poster showed the faces of Bush and Hitler with an equal sign pointing to Posada's face, the AP report said.
 

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