Posted on Monday, 01.27.14
The hypocrisy summit
OUR OPINION: Hemispheric forum in Havana a fearful time for dissidents
HERALDED@MIAMIHERALD.COM
The two faces of the Cuban government will be on full display in Havana 
Tuesday and Wednesday during the summit of a hemispheric body explicitly 
designed to spite the United States and Canada, which are excluded from 
membership.
On the surface, the second summit of the Community of Latin American and 
Caribbean States, or CELAC for its initials in Spanish, will be a grand 
celebration of unity against hemispheric domination by the despised 
United States. (Canada's exclusion is mostly a case of collateral damage.)
The streets are being spruced up, new flower pots are lining the road 
into the city from the airport and decaying billboards are being 
replaced. A fresh coat of paint will serve to conceal the dilapidated 
condition of Havana's crumbling buildings.
In the shadows, meanwhile, the police-state goons, who represent the 
real Cuba, will be busy rounding up the usual suspects — those who 
clamor for genuine freedom and detest the oppression that prevails in 
the country of Jose Martí's birth.
This is the customary script for events in Cuba that draw international 
media attention, as with papal visits. The government is so keen to 
create the impression that everyone lives happily under a benevolent 
Castro dictatorship that it takes extra measures to ensure that neither 
official visitors nor the press witness signs of dissent.
If only the visiting heads of state could peer through the smokescreen, 
they would see another reality. The prominent blogger Yoani Sánchez has 
noted that events that bring visiting dignitaries to Cuba are an 
especially fearful time for dissidents and anyone branded as an 
"anti-social element" in the communist paradise:
The clandestine and officially "unpresentable" Havana has been warned 
that it must be quiet, very quiet. The beggars are being held until the 
Summit is over, the pimps warned to maintain control over their girls 
and boys, while members of the political police visit the homes of the 
opposition. The illegal market is also being held in check.
The government routinely cuts phone service to known dissidents, ensures 
that beggars and undesirables remain out of sight and sees to it that 
illegal satellite antennas are taken down. Some dissidents are routinely 
placed under house arrest. Everyone must be on their best behavior lest 
the visitors get the wrong impression.
The cruel hypocrisy of the Cuban government is ably abetted by the 
visiting heads of state, some 30 of whom are expected for the summit.
Some, like Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro, are slavish followers of the 
Castro model. After all, CELAC was the brainchild of the late Hugo 
Chávez, Mr. Maduro's predecessor and mentor.
But most of the others know that the repressive Cuban model would never 
work at home, and would never dare try it. Their participation is a 
knee-jerk response to calls for leftist solidarity, a relic of the Cold 
War designed to mollify leftists back home and create the appearance of 
political solidarity with Cuba.
But the truth is that the Cuban model has less credibility than ever. 
The leading nations of the hemisphere may offer lip service to Cuba's 
anti-American views, but they don't support it in practice.
Instead, they partner with each other and the United States in regional 
economic alliances and place their faith in open markets, democracy and 
free enterprise.
That is the path to a more prosperous future. Someday, Cuba itself will 
take the same path.
Source: The hypocrisy summit - Editorials - MiamiHerald.com - 
http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/27/3896716/the-hypocrisy-summit.html
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