Translator: Unstated, Yoani Sánchez
I remember very well the children's parties that ended with the pushing 
and shoving and laughter of those who wanted to grab a candy or a gift. 
The piñatas, shaped like a clown or a boat or resembling some cartoon 
character, were the funnest part of every birthday. But that time has 
passed and what is being distributed now in our country is not sweets or 
balloons, but properties. Like the Nicaraguan Sandinistas once did, or 
the leaders of the Communist Party in Russia, Cuban leaders are 
distributing — at their convenience — rental properties, cars, 
businesses, houses.
Yesterday's publication of Decree 292 — for the ownership transfer of 
motor vehicles — has been the culmination of a several decade's wait. 
For far too long obtaining a car has been a perk earned through 
unconditional ideology. Now, they have added a few pinches of this 
ingredient called "market" to a mechanism that has been ruled for half a 
century. Even with this new legal reform, however, the great majority of 
citizens are only allowed to buy a used car, which in Cuba means 
vehicles more than 15 years old, and in particular Russian Ladas or 
Moskvitches, or Polish Fiats, which were previously marketed through a 
meritocracy. Some modern cars in State service will be sold to those who 
meet the strict requirements of belonging to an institution and 
demonstrating their fidelity to the Government. And those impeccably new 
ones, recent imports, are destined for a Revolutionary elite that has in 
their pockets money sanctified through official channels. To drive a 
shiny Citroen or a late model Peugeot will continue to be a sign of 
being a member of the powers-that-be.
Another revealing detail in this resolution is the emphasis given, in 
its pages, to the concept of "final departure" for those who relocate 
abroad. If, as Raul Castro himself has said, we are committed to 
migratory reform, what is the significance of not repealing this 
shameful category? Those who leave may not sell their cars before 
departing, they may only transfer them to their closest relatives. The 
penalization of emigration, then, remains in place. But what is most 
worrying is the already visible composition of the piñata, the structure 
of a sharing out among equals, embodied in cars taken out of tourist or 
business use which will be marketed to a very select group of people. 
The existence of such a mechanism will undoubtedly feed corruption, 
"socialism," and put into the hands of government sympathizers the 
fattest strings for when it becomes necessary to pull on them in unison. 
I have no doubt that to this party, which they have already begun to 
prepare, we Cubans will not be invited.
29 September 2011
 
 
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