Called to be Mosquito Hunters / Jose Hugo Fernandez
Posted on September 29, 2013
HAVANA, Cuba, September, www.cubanet.org – The generalship of the regime 
is showing particular interested in incorporating women into the army. 
In several sites in Havana where people gather signs have been posted 
lately calling on young unemployed women to sign up for active military 
service. The proposal includes two supposedly tempting benefits: a 
starting salary of 450 Cuban pesos a month (the basic salary of 
professionals in Cuba), and the chance to take advantage of the 
so-called Order 18, of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, which allows them 
to opt for university majors of their choice, with study facilities, 
according to their new circumstances.
Suddenly, one might think that this project is another nod from the 
regime to international progressives, whose members might easily have 
noticed the rancid sexism that prevails in the uniformed forces on the 
Island, where, if they are not abundant, there is also a lack of women, 
though they fill ornamental roles.
It seems then, that among the "reforms" to update their particular 
socialism, the generals resolved to finally grant women their rightful 
place among the ranks. However, if that were the purpose, it's thinly 
reflected in some of the details of the call. For example, the 
professional salaries (which aren't) that these young women will be paid 
from the start, don't seem targeted to stimulate their attraction to the 
military life, because during their first two years they will work as 
civilians in the mosquito vector campaign, work already performed by 
hundreds of thousands of women and men (for a much lower salary) without 
the academic requisites they are demanding from potential candidates.
So these girls are not going to serve directly as the olive-green 
uniformed, nor are they going to study in the military academies to 
become technicians and officers in the army. Apparently, their 
recruitment will not entail any direct benefit to the FAR. They are 
being called to take on a civilian task, for which they will receive a 
"privileged" salary, along with other facilities, on behalf of an 
employer who does not need them.
This leaves some doubts in the air, in addition to two or three 
half-baked conjectures.
Is the call nothing more than a new strategy to confront the practice of 
prostitution, continually growing and more scandalous among young Cuban 
women? Do the generals really believe that with a salary equivalent to 
less than 20 CUC a month, and offers of university entrance, they are 
going to manage to recruit girls en masse for their later control under 
the military regime? If so, why summon only those with twelve years of 
schooling? And why does it have to military who take on an eminently 
civil responsibility? Is it that the civil institutions are not 
sufficiently reliable, or they can only attract these young women with 
the economic incentive needed to inflate the payrolls, only to encourage 
these young women?
Any effort is welcome to try to contain the marked tendency of young 
Cuban women today towards prostitution. But paying a professional salary 
to high school graduates to devote themselves to hunting mosquitoes for 
two years, doesn't seem a very lucid approach, neither in terms of civic 
rescue, nor as a response to the demands of the gender advocates.
To make matters worse, the decision contains at least two staggering 
inconsistencies. On the one hand, those who work in the mosquito control 
campaign have had their wages lowered recently, to the point that these 
girls would earn 100 Cuban pesos more to do the same job, but with less 
experience. On the other hand, it represents a useless swelling of 
payrolls, at exactly that time when they're talking about laying off the 
hundreds of thousands of State employees as the regime insists on the 
need to eliminate unproductive jobs.
The anxiety of the generals before the imperative to win the support of 
these girls is understandable. Especially if we give credence to the 
assumption that the heir to the throne, Mariela Castro, convinced them 
that any good work they undertake against prostitution, shall be 
promptly rewarded by the praise of liberal forums and the international 
press. But it wouldn't cost them anything to chart their strategies 
better, so as not to so obviously shoot themselves in the foot.
José Hugo Fernández. Note : The books of this author can be purchased here.
 From Cubanet
27 September 2013
Source: "Called to be Mosquito Hunters / Jose Hugo Fernandez | 
Translating Cuba" - 
http://translatingcuba.com/called-to-be-mosquito-hunters-jose-hugo-fernandez/
 
 
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