The latest in the parade to suck profits out of the sad island are the
Canadian, Spanish, British, and Monaco capitalists developing real estate
jointly with Cuba's totalitarian government. Want an oceanfront time-share
in Varadero or a condo in Havana's swanky Miramar district? No problem.
That's right, ordinary Cubans are estranged in their own country. All
those well-meaning foreigners who claim to wish to improve conditions for
Cuba's workers fail to mention that the only employer allowed is the Cuban
government itself. So while those foreigners pay the Cuban government in
dollars for Cuban workers, the near-slaves get paid a pittance in weak
Cuban pesos.
Not that long ago, the world looked aghast at, and supported sanctions
against, South Africa's brutal apartheid regime. Yet the United Nations
again condemns the U.S. trade embargo of Cuba. And now it is politically
correct to promote investment that aids and abets Fidel Castro's
dictatorship and its own brand of apartheid con salsa.
Cuba's government forbids its people from freely eating, drinking, or
staying at resorts built for foreign tourists. It bars Cubans from legally
investing or owning as foreigners do, or even organizing independent trade
unions. While foreigners get central air conditioning, satellite
television, 24-hour security, and swimming pools, Cubans get ration cards,
crowded tenements, dilapidated buses, and no civil freedoms.
Cuba's pathetic failure of a government is prostituting its nation's
assets and people, and big-money vultures are eager to collude in the
exploitation. The embargo on commerce with Cuba has reined in U.S.
investors so far. But anti-embargo fever is growing.
Just this week Sen. John Warner, R-Va., called for a bipartisan
commission to review U.S. policy toward Cuba. That sounds innocuous
enough. But we wonder about hidden agendas when Sen. Warner's heavyweight
supporters, such as former Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and
Lawrence Eagleburger and former Sen. Malcolm Wallop, represent big
corporations whose interest in Cuba may not be exactly selfless.
Fine, review U.S. policy and Cuba. But do it right. Don't stack the
odds against the embargo by not addressing squarely how Castro's regime
relentlessly violates the basic human rights of Cuba's people.Will anyone listen now?
ABUSES IN CUBA
Few talk about how Cubans are exploited as foreign
investment grows politically chic.
Copyright © 1998 The Miami Herald