Posted on Fri, Sep. 01, 2006
CUBA
Raúl Castro names rival to cabinet
Havana mades its first cabinet change since Raúl Castro took over 
leadership from his brother.
BY NANCY SAN MARTIN
nsanmartin@MiamiHerald.com
In the first Cuban government change since Raúl Castro began ruling the 
island a month ago, a well-known hardliner and reputed rival was named 
minister of communications and information science.
The appointment of Ramiro Valdés Thursday was viewed by most 
Cuba-watchers as significant because of his perceived rivalry with Fidel 
Castro's brother, and because it gives him control of the flow of 
information in and out of the island.
''Better to keep your enemies closer than your friends,'' said Andy 
Gomez of the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and 
Cuban-American Studies.
Raúl Castro, 75, was made provisional leader on July 31 after his older 
brother Fidel underwent surgery for a still undisclosed ailment.
Valdés, now about 74, was with the Castro brothers during the failed 
attack on the Moncada army barracks in 1953 now marked as the start of 
the revolution. He was jailed with them and later joined their guerrilla 
group that toppled dictator Fulgencio Batista. But for more than two 
decades, Raúl Castro and Valdés ran rival power centers -- Castro, the 
well-respected armed forces and Valdés, the feared Interior Ministry, in 
charge of domestic security.
CLASHED OFTEN
The two are reported to have clashed often and in 1985, Valdés was 
dismissed as minister and member of the Cuban Communist Party's ruling 
Political Buro, and faded away from the public spotlight. No official 
reason for his dismissal was ever given.
One brief biography says he was a founder of the Communist Party and 
member of its Central Committee since 1965. He served in the legislative 
National Assembly since 1976 and sat on its 31-member Council of State 
-- its powerful standing committee -- until 1997 and was reelected in 2003.
During Cuba's opening to foreign investments in the mid-1990s, he was 
named head of the Grupo de Electrónica, a government agency that deals 
in computers and works closely with Italian and Chinese companies 
providing Cuba with telecommunication and technology services.
Valdés' appointment came at a time when the government is cracking down 
on illegal satellite TV antennas that receive foreign broadcasts, such 
as Univisión and the U.S.-funded TV Martí.
''Now [Valdés] can directly confront ideology. He can control and 
repress the flow of information,'' said Eugenio Yáñez, an economics 
professor who worked closely with top military officials in the 1990s 
and now lives in Miami.
The appointment, experts said, also may point to a third and more subtle 
significance: Cuba's increasing economic ties to China.
Valdés has made several trips to China, including one in which he 
accompanied Raúl Castro. The younger Castro is believed to look 
positively on Beijing's system of an open economy with tight political 
controls.
NEW AMBASSADOR
On Aug. 25, Havana announced the appointment of a new ambassador to 
China, Carlos Miguel Pereira, long viewed as the right-hand man to 
Foreign Minister Felipe Pérez Roque.
''Raúl is trying to emphasize that [both hardliners and reformers] have 
a stake in the future of the country,'' said Frank Mora, a professor at 
the National War College in Washington.
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/special_packages/5min/15412298.htm
 
 
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