Andres Oppenheimer
Andres
Oppenheimer is a foreign correspondent and a member of The Miami
Herald team that won the 1987 Pulitzer Prize.
Judging from a copy I received this week, it's not only directed
against Cuba's courageous independent journalists but could be applied to
any Cuban who writes a letter abroad complaining about Cuba's problems, or
-- God forbid -- suggesting that the Maximum Leader may be less than
perfect.
Among its key provisions:
Target: any publication sent by foreign pro-democracy groups, which
often smuggle into the island copies of the United Nations Declaration of
Human Rights, or banned books like George Orwell's Animal Farm and
biographies of Martin Luther King and Mohandas K. Ghandi.
Target: Cuba's independent journalists, who are not allowed to work in
state-controlled media, and sell their reports to foreign media. Many of
them have become a more reliable source of news than the Communist Party's
daily Granma or the government's news agency Prensa Latina.
Target: Could be applied against any Cuban who complains to a foreigner
about the state of the economy, since such information can lead a
potential foreign business partner not to invest on the island.
Target: The paragraph is aimed at prohibiting religious or other
nongovernmental organizations from sending money, computers or fax
machines to independent groups or individuals in Cuba.
Conclusion: While Law 88 is ostensibly aimed at countering the ``U.S.
economic war on Cuba,'' its real target is not the U.S. government --
which has been trying to build bridges to Cuba lately -- but Cuba's
independent journalists, independent civic groups on the island, and U.S.
and European nongovernmental organizations trying to help them.
``It's lamentable,'' Pierre Shori, Sweden's minister of international
cooperation, told me in a telephone interview Wednesday. ``This kind of
free movement of thought should be allowed: It's part of the modern world.
No man is an island, and neither can be Cuba.''
You can e-mail Andres Oppenheimer at aoppenheimerCuba: back to darkness
@herald.com and read his columns on HeraldLink:
www.herald.com/americas/archive/oppen
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