SITUATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN CUBA
1. Introduction
For the past 46 years Cuba has been, and continues to be, a totalitarian state
controlled single-handedly by Fidel Castro, who occupies all the relevant: Head
of State, Head of Government, Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces and First
Secretary of the Communist Party.
The authority and control Castro wields over the population is supported, mostly
by his enormous military-repressive apparatus, by the totalitarian and
antidemocratic system in place, and by the total impunity he enjoys to apply the
most severe measures against his opponents, including the death penalty and
arbitrary imprisonment.
Castro's control is so absolute that it transcends the political arena to
include all aspect of human activity such as the economy, commerce, education,
employment, property, culture, religion and even the family.
The most salient feature of the system established in Cuba is that it denies the
people the capacity and possibility of changing, by legal means, the
totalitarian powers that Castro has assigned himself and that have allowed him
to become Cuba's dictator for life.
In fact, the very structure of Cuban politics is the antithesis of the
democratic systems known to the West that are based on the independence and
equilibrium between the executive, legislative and judicial powers. Article 5 of
the current Socialist Constitution establishes that "The Communist Party is
the guiding force of all Cuban society." In effect, the State, the
Government, the Legislative Assembly and the Judicial Power are submitted to the
authority of the Communist Party controlled by Fidel Castro.
As can be observed, members of the Communist Party elite are the ones who occupy
the positions of importance in the state, government, National Legislative
Assembly, Judicial Power and Armed Forces.
2. Political Rights
In Cuba, there are no political rights. The Communist Party (P.C.C.), the only
political party permitted, exercises a monopoly over all political activity in
the island, assisted by the so-called "organizations of the masses".
In truth, these political organizations are headed by leaders of the Cuban
Communist Party and exert the first level of direct control over citizens. There
is a governmental organization, or "organizations of the masses," for
each type of activity:
1. The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution" (CDR), organized on a
block by block basis in every city and town accross the island, are charged with
spying on citizens even in their own homes.
2. The Union of Communist Youths (U.J.C.), found in every educational center,
has the authority to organize, supervise and direct the political activities in
schools and universities.
3. The Worker Union of Cuba (C.T.C), in its capacity as official labor union, is
charged with organizing workers and putting them at the service of the
government. Present in every work center, it impedes workers from organizing
independently or claiming benefits.
4. The Rapid Response Brigades (B.R.R.) are para-military forces charged with
confronting popular protests or political dissidents. They are chiefly composed
by plainclothes government agents.
5. The Federation of Cuban Women (F.M.C.) organizes women to carry out political
activities on behalf of the government.
Cubans are practically compelled to belong to one or more of these political
organizations, or resign themselves to become social pariahs, unable to obtain
employment, proceed to higher-level education, or even obtain certain consumer
goods. Figure 2 shows an employment application where the applicant must list
the political organizations he or she belongs to and the level of military
training obtained.
In Cuba no elections are held to elect the President of the Republic because the
position does not exist. The equivalent position is that of "First
Secretary of The Communist Party", a position that is not subject to
elections. The First Secretary is chosen solely by the Central Committee of the
Party.
The only elections held in Cuba are to elect members to the National Legislative
Assembly, but the only candidates which can participate are those who have sworn
loyalty to Fidel Castro and are integrated in the government's organizations. In
addition, the first round of elections are held in units of the Committees for
the Defense of the Revolution and voting is not done in secrecy but by raising a
hand in favor of a candidate. Nearly half of the members of the National
Legislative Assembly are directly selected by the Communist Party. there is also
a Candidates Commission, also controlled by the Party, with authority to veto
candidates that do not meet the criteria of sympathy and involvement with the
previously mentioned political oganizations.
It is evident and unquestionable that the National Assembly is not
representative of the Cuban people, nor is it an authentic legislative body.
Further proof of this is that the Assembly only meets twice a year for two days
and, in the 24 years since its creation, has not actually created a single law.
Its function has been one of meeting to vote by raising the hand and approve
laws that have already been passed through the Communist Party (Fidel Castro)
through the Council of State.
In Cuba, associations in defense of human rights are prohibited. Although Cuban
law doesn not state so explicitly, the fact is that authorities do not even
acknowledge requests for legalizing such associations. In that manner, any group
that organizes as a human rights group is deemed illegal and its members are
subject to arrest for engaging in "illicit association," one of the
many political "crimes" that experts in the United Nations have
questioned the Cuban government about and have not received response. (Refer to
United Nation Cuba report -E/CN.4/1989/46- especially Annex XVI "Questions
Presented by the Group that visited Cuba" and that Cuban authorities have
never responded to.) Former UN Secretary General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar also
asked the Cuban government to responde in his document -E/CN.4/1991/28- page 3,
and also received no response.
3. Civil Rights
Cuban authorities have seriously undermined the right to life. The first measure
imposed by Fidel Castro when he seized power in January of 1959 was the Death
Penalty (previously prohibited). Through the following five years, executions by
firing squad became such a commonplace, daily event that they were often
graphically featured on television and in newspapers. The "Revolutionary
Tribunals" turned the first of Castro's rule into a real reign of terror.
In April of 1961, the government enacted Decree 988 by which "executions
can be carried out in less than 48 hours, without trial, against any individual
caught engaging in counterrevolutionary activities."
Even today, the Cuban Penal Code contains 19 articles by which the death penalty
can be imposed, 15 of them for political motives. Cuba laws are so ambiguous and
obscure hat the government can apply them arbitrarily, as in Article 97, clause
3, that states: "Whatsoever engages in recognizance activities, takes
photographs or procures or obtains information without the authorization of
State Security, incurs a 10 to 20 years prison sentence or the death
penalty." Note that law doesn't clarify what type of information cannot be
obtained nor what places cannot be photographed.
The number of executions in Cuba can not be calculated due to the rigid control
of information that is in place, but a lawsuit presented in Spain against Fidel
Castro for "crimes and torture" in November of 1998 contained 18.000
sworn testimonies from victims and their families.
At this time, it is believed that at least eight individuals are awaiting
execution in Cuba.
4. The Right to Safety
The government's practice of organizing "acts of repudiation" --where
all manner of threats, insults and bodily harm against dissidents and human
rights activists are perpetrated-- as well as the creation of para-military
brigaes to physically assault those who protest against the dictatorship, are
evidence of the violence by which the government silences claims for the respect
for human rights.
Figure 4 shows a photographe taken by the international press agency Reuters of
a para-military "Rapid Response Brigade" armed with clubs, ready to
carry out an act of physical aggression against a human rights group.
Cuba was one of the few, if not the only, country where an official celebration
for International Human Rights Day was not held in honor of the 50th anniversary
of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, but instead
arrested and beat dissidents. When members of the Lawton Foundation for Human
Rights attempted a public reading of the 30 articles contained in the
declaration in Butari Park, located in the Luyanó sector of Havana, they were
violently dissolved.
In prisons, beatings are systematic an hunger is used as a punitive measure.
Torture is also practiced against prisoners, especially political prisoners.
International human rights organisms that monitor Cuba, such as Amnesty
International, Human Rights Watch and Pax Christi, consistently report on cruel,
inhumane and degrading treatment in Cuban prisons.
The 264 prisons indentified across the island, with a penal population of
approximately 280,000 prisoners, equivalent to 2.5% of the Cuban population, are
a clear indicator of the social crisis Cuba is suffering. There is no other
country in the world with a higher proportion of its population in prison.
5. The Right to Freedom of Expression
Freedom of expression does not exist in Cuba. Only expressions that coincide
with official political ideology as established by Fidel Castro is allowed.
Criticism of errors, corruption or abuses on the part of the government is
punishable. The laws that prohibit freedom of expression through political
offenses list crimes such as: enemy propaganda, disrespect to the Commander in
Chief (Fidel Castro), offense to the homeland, ideological deviation,
dangerousness and distribution of false information.
The most important instrument for freedom of expression, the press, has been
eliminated in Cuba. Shortly after Castro's rise to power, 46 years ago, all
means of mass communication were confiscated and put to the exclusive service of
the Communist Party and the government. Radio, Television, and print media and
cinema function only to spread communist ideology. Information is published only
when they favor the official party line or when they serve to damage the image
of the democratic world. Entertainment programs must have political content or a
message that coincides with official ideology.
For example, Cubans learned that Americans had landed on the moon several weeks
after it happened and through letters received from family abroad because the
Cuban media published absolutely nothing of the extraordinary event. In similar
manner, several weeks after it happened, the Cuban people still had not heard
that the Soviets had invaded Afghanistan.
Foreign correspondents in Cuba also fall victim to governmental persecution,
albeit to a lesser degree. Authorities send them written complaints concerning
articles not to the government's liking, they receive telephone threats, or are
excluded from press conferences and important events. Some foreign
correspondents have been physically attacked, as in the case of Czech journalist
Michael Cermak and French journalist Mike de la Grange.
The reports prepared by the Special Rapporteurs for Cuba assigned by the United
Nations are banned from circulating in the island. Their contents have never
been published, even partially. The circulation of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights is similarly persecuted.
Music, books and academic works produced by Cuban exiles or any non-Cuban person
who is critical of the Cuban government are also prohibited. Cubans on the
island ignore the fact that exiled Cuban writer Guillermo Cabrera Infante
received the Principe de Asturias award, which is the highest honor in Spanish
literature, equivalent to the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Cubans are also prohibited from viewing foreign television broadcasts or listen
to short wave radio. Law Decree 157 of March 21, 1995 prohibits antennas to
capture foreign broadcasts. The Decree also states that, "Authorities have
the obligation to ensure that the information distributed is authorized,"
and stipulates penalties incurred by those who infringe the law.
In their obsessive control, authorities have installed a large number of
transmitters to interfere radio signals that enter the country.
Internet access, the possession of fax machines and computers is severely
restricted. Cubans can not place overseas calls directly, but are required to go
through an operator. In fact, the criteria to obtain a telephone require that
applicants demonstrate political merit.
6. The Right to Religious Freedom
Although for the past two years the anti-religious politics of the government
and the harassment of students who profess their faith has decreased, serious
limitations still exist as well as prohibitions in activities susch as:
missionary work, evangelization beyond the confines of churches or temples,
entrance to the country of clergy, media access, publication of books and
periodicals, worship and the celebration of mass in the prisons.
Until just a few years ago, youths were banned or expelled from universities and
technical learning centers simply for professing their faith. Religious weddings
were an extraordinary occurrence because they could result in loss of employment.
7. The Right to Freedom of Movement
Cubans cannot freely enter or exit their own country. Among those who are
prohibited from leaving the country are the youths between the ages of 16 to 27,
well known athletes and individuals with high profiles in science, art and
culture, or who have obtained military ranks or occupied influential political
positions. Doctors particularly face great obstacles to leaving the country
permanently.
Relatives of individuals who have sought political asylum while traveling abroad
become hostages of the government and are denied the right to leave the country
to reunite with loved ones.
On the other hand, Cuban who obtain the premission slip to leave, commonly
referred to as "the white card" must pay $500 (in US dollars) per
person for official transactions. Taking into account that the average salary in
Cuba is less than 200 Cuban pesos, which are the equivalent of around $10.00 (U.S.),
the imposition is clearly abusive. In addition, the state confiscates all
personal property (bank account, home, furniture, durable goods) of those who
are allowed to leave he country permanently.
To enter the island, Cubans who reside or have obtained political asylum abroad
require a visa as if they were foreingners. The selection criteria to grant the
visa is based on the applicant's conduct abroad with respect to the Castro
government.
Inside the island there are also restrictions to freedom of movement. Law Decree
217, dated April 26, 1997, prohibit inhabitants of rual areas or other provinces
from establishing residence in the capital.
In Cuba, no one can sell a house. Home swapping is the only transaction
tolerated, as long as prior clearance is obtained from authorities. Internal
regulations also require that authorities be informed of the identity and other
personal data of any individual who resides at the home of another for a period
of more than 30 days. In the case of foreigner, information must be immediately
provided.
In the main cities and towns of the country, there are upper class residential
areas referred to "frozzen zones" where houses are assigned only to
Communist Party elite and high-ranking militaries. Access to these zones is
restricted or prohibited to nonresidents.
Meanwhile, the situation of the "Captive Towns" still persistes. These
towns, located in isolated or inaccessible areas, were built with the force
labor of peasants of the Escambray mountain range, in the province of Las Villas
(today Sancti Spiritu.) Between 1960 and 1970, on four different occasions, the
army collected area farmers and peasants and, after incarcerating the men,
confined the women and children in temporary shelters, later forcing the men to
build makeshift dwellings in remote areas of the island.
The families were later relocated in those towns. They were calld captive towns
because its inhabitants could no leave them. Members of the United Nations
Commission that visited Cuba in 1988 interviewed several inhabitants of those
towns and were able to verify the injustice that had been committed against them
thatstripped them of their lands and personal property, aside from kaming them
perpetual prisoners.
The United Nations Group on Internally Displaced Persons has documented
testimonies from these victims.
8. Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
The essence of Cuba's political culture is captured in Fidel Castro's phrase:
"Everything within the Revolution, nothing outside the Revolution"
Article 38 of the current Constitution establishes that educational and cultural
policies are based on Marxist-Leninist philosophy, and emphatically states that
the purpose of the government is the communist formation of children, youths and
adults, and artistic creativity is free as long as long as its expression and
content is not contrary to the goals of the Revolution. In fact, the only
published writers are those who are politically integrated to the government.
Unconditional political conformation is a basic requirement to succeed
culturally and intellectually.
While free education in Cuba is looked upon favorably by all, it is no less true
that the degree of integration and political loyalty demanded by an imposed
ideology not only undermines but also rises as a discriminatory barrier. The end
result is that education cannot be said to be "free" if to receive it
one must submit one's conscience to the will of the state that provides it.
Cuban Minister of Higher Education, Fernando Vecino Alegret's statement that:
"Universities are only for revolutionaries" reveals an intolerable
policy of discrimination. The same holds true for technical and vocational
schools.
Student participation in forced labor for several months of the year is also an
unacceptable practice.
The Student Cumulative Dossier evidences the degree of control the govenment
maintains over students and their homes. The Dossier, kept on every student
throughout their educational life, gathers information concerning his or her
political integration and that of the parents, opinions and participation in
political rallies and activities organized by the government, records whether
the student and his family practices or professes a religion, notes the economic
level of the family and whether there is harmony in the home. The Dossier also
contains othe information of a personal nature but that the government deems
politically important.
The government forces students and youth to attend political acts and later
presents that as proof that his government enjoys majority support. Students who
refuse to participate risk being expelled from their school. The same situation
occurs with workers and employees.
The participation of citizens in the conomic life of the country is limited to
their capacity as workers. In 1968 the government completed its process of
confiscating properties and private business, while also prohibiting new
ventures, thus becoming the only employer in the island. Not satisfied with that,
it also went on to impose the condition that to obtain employment, membership in
its political organizations was required. Decree 34 of March 12, 1980,
establishes that: "The political conduct of the worker is fundamental to
his continued employment".
The majority of dissidents and human rights activists in Cuba have been
terminated from their jobs for political motives. Their next of kin are often
also made to pay with the loss of their jobs. Former political prisoners are
also victimized by discrimination in the work force.
The degree of political control exerted over workers violates international
labor laws. The Labor Record or employee file, as in the case of the Student
Cumulative Dossier, follows the worker for life, recording, in addition to
personal information, political and private data as well.
Although Cuba laws do not explicitly ban the organization of independent labor
unions, the government does not recognize the existence of any, instead
punishing with job termination any worker that chooses to join an independent
union. The persecution and harassment against independent labor union activists
including Rafael Peraza, Rafael Iturralde, Evaristo Pérez, Pedro Pablo Alvarez,
Jorge Martínez, Florentino Ledesma and Gustavo Toirac is consistently denounced
before the International Labor Organization in Geneva.
On a social scale, Cubans are discriminated against vis a vis foreigners and
government elite. Cuban are not allowed access to luxury hotels and resorts,
certain beaches, entertainment centers and restaurants. Foreigners are allowed
to purchase and own hing-end apartments and condominiums, but Cubans are not.
Foreigners are permited, even encouraged, to open business in Cuba. They are
allow to import and export and engage in commercial transactions and services,
while all these activities are prohibited to Cubans citizens.
To attract foreign investment while still maintaining control, Cuba has put in
place a series of labor laws and practices that violate a number of
international labor agreements of which Cuba is part. A document issued by the
independent Consejo Unitario de Trabajadores Cubanos (Unitary Council of Cuban
Workers) dated October 20, 1999 and distributed to foreign business in Cuba,
denounceslabor violations incurred by these businesses as accomplices of the
Cuban government.
The Cuban government prohibits foreign business from engaging in the following:
1. Directly hiring workers. The government does the screening and hiring, with
the job going to, of course, those who are politically loyal.
2. Salaries are negotiated between the government and the corporation. Workers
are never consulted by either party.
3. The salary of the worker is paid out in dollars to the government, which then
pays the worker the same numeric valuea, but in Cuban pesos. The result is the
confiscation by the government of approximately 95% of the worker's salary. A
dollar is worth 20 Cuban pesos. For example, the government takes in $300 US
dollars as the worker's salary and pays the worker 300 pesos, the equivalent of
$15 US dollars, hereby paying the worker only 5% of the salary actually paid by
the corporation.
4. Workers cannot organize unions in those corporations nor make claims of any
kind.
The above described practice, in violation of international agreements, is also
applied in contracts the Cuban government signs with other countries to provide
Cuban labor, for example doctors or construction brigades. It is estimated that
around 20,000 Cuban work abroad under this conditions.
9. Political Repression
The State Security Department (DSE) is the principal repressive force that
guarantees the totalitarian control that Fidel Castro holds in Cuba. The DSE
operates with unlimited impunity. Its activities are far reaching: arrest and
isolation of individuals, intercept or interrupt telephone and written
communication, search homes or individuals, impede exit from the island,
threaten or beat dissenters, and instruct judges as to the sentences to impose
in political cases.
The DSE maintains an extensive network of informants who, as undercover agents,
spy and report on "potential enemies" of the state in all public
places and work centers. In coordination with the leaders of the government's
so-called organizations of the masses, the DSE watches and persecutes virtually
every Cuban citizen.
The degree of fear and control Cubans live under can be understand by bearing in
mind that Cuba is a small island measuring 110,000 square kilometers, with no
frontier; with internal regulations of such severity that a national personal,
work and politically related information; and that the Committees of the Defense
of the Revolution on every bolck report information on each individual residing
on the block.
23 october 2005
www.netforcuba.org