by Peter Westmore
02 May 2009NW 02 May 2009
WA's peak union body recently hosted the visit to Perth of the
ambassador of Cuba, one of the most repressive dictatorships on earth.
Peter Westmore reports.
UnionsWA, Western Australia's peak union body, in conjunction with the
Perth branch of the Australia-Cuba Friendship Society, recently hosted
the visit to Perth of the Cuban ambassador.
Ambassador Abelardo Curbelo spoke at a public forum at the University of WA.
This was extraordinary, as Cuba has an appalling record on human rights.
Its suppression of free trade unions has been documented by human rights
organisations and trade union internationals for years. Average wages
for workers in Cuba are about only $20-25 per month.
The International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) has repeatedly drawn
attention to abuses in Cuba.
In its 2007 report, it stated that only a single government-controlled
union system exists.
It said: "There is no genuine collective bargaining and the right to
strike is not recognised in law. Independent trade unionists continued
to face persecution, and seven of the trade unionists sentenced to
lengthy prison terms in 2003 remained behind bars. Humanitarian aid
destined for them and their families was confiscated by the authorities."
Suppressed
Attempts to establish independent trade unions have been repeatedly
threatened by the regime.
Nine members of the independent United Council of Cuban Workers (CUTC)
were sentenced to lengthy prison terms, ranging from 13 to 26 years, in
2003, including Pedro Pablo Alvarez Ramos, the general secretary.
Two were later released on health grounds, but seven remained in prison
throughout 2006. Carmelo Díaz Fernández, general secretary of the
Christian trade union, Unión Sindical Cristiana, and one of the two
released because of his ill health, was repeatedly reminded by the
authorities that they still considered him a prisoner.
CUTC reported that, during the year 2006, the government confiscated
humanitarian aid sent by foreign trade unions to assist imprisoned CUTC
members and their families. The CUTC offices were regularly raided by
the government and its books, documents and computers confiscated.
Lázaro González Adán of the independent workers union, Confederación
Obrera Nacional Independiente de Cuba (CONIC), remained in prison
throughout the year, without charge and without trial. He was arrested
in October 2004 by the National Revolutionary Police. Other members of
CONIC were threatened with imprisonment.
In its 2009 report on Cuba, Human Rights Watch stated: "Cuba remains the
one country in Latin American that represses nearly all forms of
political dissent. The government continues to enforce political
conformity using criminal prosecutions, long- and short-term detentions,
mob harassment, surveillance, police warnings, and travel restrictions."
Despite the retirement of long-time dictator, Fidel Castro, in 2008 - he
was succeeded by his brother Raul - little has changed.
Human Rights Watch said, "In 2008 the country signed the two fundamental
international human rights treaties and commuted the death sentences of
several prisoners. Yet these measures have led to no significant policy
changes in Cuba. The repressive machinery built over almost five decades
of Fidel Castro's rule remains intact and continues to systematically
deny people their basic rights."
It added that Cuba's legal and institutional structures are at the root
of rights violations. "Although in theory the different branches of
government have separate areas of authority, in practice the executive
retains clear control over all levers of power. The courts, which lack
independence, undermine the right to fair trial by severely restricting
the right to a defence."
Human Rights Watch has been highly critical of the US Government's
long-standing policy of imposing restrictions on travel to Cuba and
restricting payments from Cuban Americans to their families back in Cuba.
The policy was intended as a form of economic blockade on Cuba, but has
completely failed to effect political reform in the totalitarian state
over the past 50 years.
Using official UN data, the US Bureau of Inter-American Affairs
published an analysis of Cuban society, comparing the country today with
what it was when Castro seized power in 1959.
It summarised its conclusion in these words: "An enduring myth is that
1950s Cuba was a socially and economically backward country whose
development was jump-started by the Castro government.
"In fact, according to readily-available historical data, Cuba was a
relatively advanced country in 1958, certainly by Latin American
standards and, in some areas, by world standards.
"The data appear to show that Cuba has at best maintained what were
already high levels of development in health and education, but at an
extraordinary cost to the overall welfare of the Cuban people.
"These include access to 'basics' such as adequate levels of food and
electricity, but also access to consumer goods, the availability of
which has increased significantly in other Latin American countries in
recent decades."
- Peter Westmore
TRADE UNIONS: WA unions host Cuban ambassador... Why? - 2 May 2009
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