Interview with Diario de Cuba Editor Pablo Diaz
October 14, 2014
“You can’t do good journalism if you’re thinking in terms of Left or Right.”
By Yusimi Rodríguez
HAVANA TIMES — Diario de Cuba (DDC) was born at a Starbucks in Madrid in 
2009. Its creators, Pablo Diaz (editor in chief) and a group of Cuban 
journalists, artists and intellectuals, wanted to develop a forum that 
would contribute to public and democratic debates among Cubans, beyond 
the issue of human rights.
Pablo Diaz: There were already a lot of projects dealing with the 
violation of human rights in Cuba and we wanted to tackle politics, 
sports, culture and general opinion. Our goal was to create what a 
democratic society would consider a news media, in order to help 
reconstruct Cuban society. Those were and continue to be our objectives. 
We see the variety and scope of information in Cuba as deficient. The 
Castro regime has controlled and manipulated information vigorously. New 
technologies are a tool we can use to topple the two pillars that I 
believe have sustained Castroism: the destruction of civil society and 
the manipulation of information.
Pablo, 44, was born in Cuba and lived in the former German Democratic 
Republic for several years, seeing the fall of socialism there. His 
father, the Cuban novelist, screenwriter and filmmaker Jesus Diaz, 
founded the magazine Encuentro con la Cultura Cubana. Pablo founded and 
managed the news portal Cubaencuentro from 2000 to 2009. Interviewing 
him has given me the opportunity to learn more about a site that Cuba’s 
limited Internet access prevents me from accessing regularly (even 
though the page isn’t blocked by the government), a site that some 
describe as right-wing.
HT: Some people in Cuba consider DDC a right-wing site. What is your 
opinion about this?
Pablo Diaz: First, I should clarify that I would see nothing wrong with 
being right-wing. I believe the world’s Left, in general, and the Cuban 
Left in particular, has assumed a kind of moral superiority that’s 
baseless. It would benefit Cuban society to recover a balance between 
Left and Right in the future, a cultured Right with proposals for the 
nation as a whole. This should not be demonized. All Cubans with 
right-wing positions who have suffered repression should be invited to 
take part in a broad, public debate in Cuba.
Having said that, I believe that the Left-Right debate is quite an 
archaic topic today. In Cuba, it has greater weight than in the rest of 
the world because the political panorama there is fairly archaic. 
Basically, we take a position on specific situations – sometimes, with 
more progressive stances and sometimes with more conservative ones. 
Given DDC’s position on gay marriage and the rights of the gay and other 
communities, its constant concern over racism, social equity and the way 
in which Cuba is drifting towards State capitalism, one has to have 
fairly misguided notions about what is left-wing and what is right-wing 
to classify the site that way. In Castro’s Cuba, people make such 
classifications on the basis of one’s position vis-à-vis the Castro 
regime. If that regime is left-wing, then the members of DDC would be 
proud right-wing activists.
HT: Would DDC concern itself with racism and the rights of the gay 
community if the Cuban government hadn’t failed at eliminating the 
former and repressed homosexuals?
Pablo: The issue of racism predates the current Cuban government. It is 
one of the central issues of the independence struggles, the Cuban 
republic and revolution. The Castro government has discontinued social 
debates surrounding the issue, it has manipulated it.
HT: Do you recognize no progress in this issue made by the government in 
comparison to earlier governments?
Pablo: Must we continue judging the government on the basis of what it 
did better or worse than previous regimes more than fifty years ago? 
Isn’t that enough to evaluate a political phenomenon? The question isn’t 
what the Castro regime did nor did not do in 1959, but what it is doing 
today to eradicate racism in Cuba. If we don’t approach the matter this 
way, we run the risk of continuing to talk about what happened or didn’t 
happen in the past, when the old men who are mismanaging the country 
today took power.
As for gay rights, this is an issue around the world. The Castro 
government repressed homosexuals, but, in other countries where no 
expressly repressive policies were in place, homosexuals were denied 
many rights for a very long time also. These aren’t exclusively 
anti-Castro issues. We are concerned about them because they haven’t 
been solved in our society.
The debate surrounding the Left and Right in Cuba is also determined by 
one’s position towards the US embargo, towards political alliances in 
general. Is Fidel Castro, someone who became an ally of Videla’s, the 
Argentine dictator, so as to secure his support at the UN, left-wing? 
When you deal with a dictatorship like Cuba’s, which has dismantled 
civil society and weakened the country, making it dependent on foreign 
powers, I think that debating about whether his government is left or 
right wing is entirely puerile.
HT: Another argument against the claim that DDC is a right-wing page 
would be that it publishes left-wing thinkers like Pedro Campos and 
Armando Chaguaceda. Do you see a contradiction anywhere? Couldn’t that 
be a way of giving readers a semblance of plurality, of avoiding the 
right-wing label?
Pablo Diaz: DDC has published at least fifty articles with perspectives 
that can be classified as left-wing. We recently published an article by 
Enrique Herrero, from Cubanow, calling for the lifting of the embargo. 
It was completely left-wing. What are Cuba’s left-wing publications? 
Granma? Any official Cuban media you can think of? The editorials in DDC 
are its voice. Could anyone call them right-wing?
HT: Would you publish articles in favor of the Cuban government?
Pablo Diaz: No. It’s a totalitarian dictatorship that has separated and 
murdered Cubans. It has denied them the right to express themselves, to 
organize, to create independent press media. They have all the media and 
platforms they could want. Why would we give them part of the limited 
space we have as a publication by Cuban émigrés?
HT: You’ve said that one of the things that places you on the Left or 
Right in Cuba is the issue of the blockade, which you call “embargo”. 
Why? What is DDC’s position on this?
Pablo: The word “blockade” is one the many examples of semantic 
manipulation perpetrated by the Castro government. A blockade on an 
island is physical, an embargo is something else. Cuba can trade with 
any country in the world, even with the United States today. DDC’s 
position is that the ones most interested in discussing the embargo are 
those in the Cuban government, for it is a means of avoiding any 
discussion about the essence of the Castro regime. Cuba’s problem is, 
first of all, a problem among Cubans. Castroism has done a good job of 
selling people the idea that the main problem is between Cuba and the 
United States.
I consider the Cuban government co-responsible for the embargo. It has 
had fifty years to get it removed. When it seized US interests without 
compensating US citizens, as international law requires, it opted for 
confrontation. Have we forgotten the arrogance of our political leaders 
about the embargo, when the communist bloc still existed? The Cuban 
government has been unable to reach an agreement with all US 
administrations that could have negotiated. It has manipulated political 
situations in order to maintain the embargo. This was evident with the 
Carter administration, the Peruvian Embassy crisis, and during the 
Clinton administration. We saw it again with the downing of the Brothers 
to the Rescue planes. We’re seeing it now with Alan Gross. It’s a 
political game designed by the leadership to keep Cuban society from 
demanding that it assume a quota of responsibility for this disaster.
HT: You saw the fall of East Germany. To what extent do you think we are 
from seeing democratic change in Cuba?
Pablo: Quite far. It will require more than getting rid of the Castro 
regime, it will take several generations. It requires a cultural, 
educational and mental change, learning to respect contradictory 
opinions and to debate in a civilized manner. After fifty years of 
totalitarianism, Cuban society is ill. Arriving at a democracy worthy of 
that name will be very difficult. Every day the Castros remain in power 
makes the process more difficult and slower.
HT: Raul Castro promised to step down in 2018 and not to run for 
president again.
Pablo: When the time comes, he could say something else. In a 
totalitarian regime, where the entire press is under government control 
and civil society is repressed, I don’t have any reason to believe in 
this sudden democratic gesture. He could step down and place one of his 
straw-men in office and retain power this way. A change in president 
does not mean democracy. Democracy also requires freedom of expression, 
of association, of the press, it means that politicians must serve the 
people.
HT: In a more democratic context, what would DDC’s aims be?
Pablo Diaz: To contribute to consolidating democracy, governability and 
social reconstruction. One of the tasks of the press is to promote civic 
debate.
HT: In that context, would DDC hire journalists that have worked in 
official Cuban newspapers?
Pablo Diaz: What’s important is the quality of the journalistic work. 
Journalists who’ve worked in official Cuban media have already 
contributed to DDC. I would not feel comfortable with journalists who 
have been political spokespeople in totalitarian media, but, as for 
professionals who have believed in their work without intentionally 
contributing to repression, why not? The other important thing is for 
their journalistic instincts to be intact. In northern Africa, you see 
official journalists unable to do any other kind of journalism, after 
years of being gagged back home.
HT: Cuba’s official media often question the financing of alternative 
projects. Where does DDC get its funding?
Pablo Diaz: They should be ashamed to raise such questions, given the 
fact that their economic management has been pathetic as a whole. The 
notion that money is evil, promoted by Castroism, must be eliminated in 
Cuba. DDC secures more and more money through publicity and uses it to 
cover its investments on a monthly basis. We also receive funding from 
private entrepreneurs, Cuban and not, and public funds from the United 
States and Spain.
HT: You admit you receive funding from the United States?
Pablo Diaz: They’re public funds made available through competitions 
whose results are published on the web. There’s nothing secret about it.
HT: ¿Those who finance DDC don’t decide the publication’s interests or 
what people write?
Pablo Diaz: I’ve noticed what little people in Cuba, and you, know about 
what financial support for a publication means, and what its editorial 
staff does, but that’s to be expected after fifty years of 
totalitarianism. For those who offer a publication public or private 
funds to have an influence on its content, according to the Cuban 
government, all of those people and organizations would need to have the 
same interests. It would be unheard-of. The day one of the many and 
different sources of funding tries to impose conditions on us, we would 
no longer accept their support. That is how things work in the 
democratic world. The Cuban government receives support from Spanish, US 
and other foundations, but it continues to instill its population with 
totally aberrant notions.
The issue of interests within the media should also be tackled without 
prejudices. We do have an interest. Our agenda consists in going at the 
jugular of the Castro regime.
HT: Doesn’t that get in the way of rigorous journalism?
Pablo Diaz: Castroism means the absence of democracy, of freedom of the 
press, association and expression. Castroism is an obscenity.
HT: How do you explain the fact that the DDC website isn’t blocked in 
Cuba, while Cubaencuentro and Cubanet are?
Pablo Diaz: DDC was created after those two, one of which I founded and 
edited. It was created at a time in which the ideological battle being 
waged by the Castro government has eased up considerably. You mentioned 
this morning that they have admitted Cuba’s future will not be one of 
equity. Another reason could be that the points of view expressed by DDC 
on a daily basis are far more complex than those offered in other media. 
They address the opposition, but they also address the different 
currents within the Cuban leadership. At any rate, we would have to ask 
the censors that question. It makes less sense to censor a webpage 
today, because we have social networks.
HT: Diario de Cuba is the most widely-read site about Cuba today. 
Currently, it also operates a radio station, DDC-Radio, which airs a 
weekly program called Cubakustica FM. What do you attribute its success to?
Pablo Diaz: To the tireless efforts the staff and contributors have been 
making for five years, and to our editorial policy.
HT: Would you like to add anything?
Pablo Diaz: I would clarify other things if this was a different kind of 
project, but a press publication speaks for itself. I invite people to 
read it and to think about labels. You can’t do good journalism if 
you’re thinking in terms of Left or Right.
Source: Interview with Diario de Cuba Editor Pablo Diaz - Havana 
Times.org - http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=106723
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