[NYTr] No Chaos at all in Cuba, so Cuba Is "Languishing" Sez Independent Date: Wed, 1 Aug 2007 18:53:09 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit sent by Simon McGuinness [The big news is that there is no news, but how do you write about no news? If you are an Independent columnist you hop on a plane to New York. Clearly the view of Cuba from New York is no clearer than it is from Washington. David Osborne could have stayed in London if he was going to file a report based on well-worn US propaganda. The big news is that there is no news. A year ago no one in New York or Washington was predicting that there'd be no news from Cuba. A year ago Americans from the President down were looking forward to the collapse of the Cuban government, riots in the streets and some were even bracing themselves for a mass exodus of the population. None of it happened. The deputy President took charge and the elections planned for later this year will take place with almost boring predictability (but nobody, except the Cuban government, predicted it). All the normal activities go on as they would in any other established democracy. In Cuba you win a war by avoiding a war. The big news is that there is no news. If that doesn't sell newspapers, tough - no one in Cuba is bothered. -SMcG] *** The Independent - 01 August 2007 http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article2823094.ece One year on, and Cuba still languishes in Fidel's shadow By David Usborne in New York Cuba marked the first anniversary yesterday of Fidel Castro provisionally handing power to his younger brother, Raul, with little sign of the political or economic change some had expected. Human rights reform, freedom, and reliable supplies of food staples remain as elusive as ever. Absent also is Fidel himself, who relinquished absolute power on 31 July last year two days after undergoing major intestinal surgery. The biggest news about him is already old news: in spite of at least one botched operation and early indications of extreme frailty, he remains alive, so far as we know. His clinging to life is a bitter disappointment to political opponents on the island and to thousands of Cubans in exile in the United States, many of whom rushed rather too precipitously a year ago to celebrate what they assumed was his imminent passing. Called a "dictator emeritus" by some, the elder Castro has not been seen in public since July last year and most notably failed to make an appearance at last week's National Rebellion Day celebrations, which for 48 years have seen him address huge crowds in Havana. The speech was given instead by Raul and not in the capital, but in the provincial city of Camaguey. His big brother has not vanished entirely from political discourse, however, writing a weekly newspaper column, "Reflections by the Commander in Chief", which is also read in full on state television. No group laments the dearth of real change under Raul more than the island's dissidents. Human rights progress has been very slight, with only a marginal reduction in the numbers of activists in prison after some were released earlier this year on health grounds. Oscar Espinosa, an economist who was among those set free after being incarcerated in 2003 with 74 other dissidents, said: "Everything remains the same and I really don't see any change." Elizardo Sanchez, of the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation, said the state continued its "systematic and institutionalised violation" of liberties. However, the non- appearance last week of Fidel, who will be 81 this month, has been seized upon as a clear sign that his ever returning to full authority could now be ruled out. Some observers suggest, meanwhile, that Raul, 76, might begin to usher in more substantive reforms once his elder brother is dead. The small steps taken by Cuba after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s to embrace quasi-capitalism on the Chinese model, including private small-holdings for a few farmers and some tourism entrepreneurship, were introduced by Raul and he may seek eventually to expand the experiment. In his speech last week, Raul repeated an offer to open dialogue with the US in return for an end to its decades-long economic embargo. He also freely acknowledged the failure of Cuba's economy to raise standards of living on the island, where the average wage remains at B#7 a month. Manuel Cuesta Morua, who is considered a moderate opponent of the regime, said: "We are waiting for the definitive transfer of power to Raul Castro so his actions can be measured." The analysis in Washington is much the same. Thomas Fingar, a deputy director of National Intelligence, told a congressional hearing last month: "This year may mark the end of Fidel Castro's domination of Cuba, but significant, positive political change is unlikely immediately. "Although Raul Castro has solidified his own position as successor, it is too soon to tell what policy course he will take once Fidel has left the scene." * ================================================================= .NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems . Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us . .339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 http://www.blythe.org . List Archives: https://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ . 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