Dominican Today Forum » Living in the DR » General Info » Cuban Food Lobster, Shrimp and Beef: Will Cuban Laws Against Their Possession Change?
#141 - Posted 19 November 2009, 3:41 PM
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RE: Cuba cuts back on rationed products-Commies are throwing in the Towel and circle the drain
Quote:
abc200 previously said:

You reply to none of the points - its easy to verify the public opinion data from other sources.
More data:
http://www.religioustolerance.org/abopollca.htm
I'm sure that if the vast majority of people in the UK believed in the Catholic position - lofe beginning at conception the 'morning after' pill etc. would have got shouted down in the House of Commons. As it is there is a militant minority trying undemocratically to impose their viewpoint on others.
S.

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#142 - Posted 20 November 2009, 10:08 AM
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RE: Cuba cuts back on rationed products-Commies are throwing in the Towel and circle the drain

By JORGE G. CASTANEDA

Normalization of U.S. relations with Cuba was widely seen as exactly the kind of high-value, low-hanging fruit that would be ideal for a president elected under the banner of "change." But a scathing new Human Rights Watch (HRW) report, "New Castro, Same Cuba," will make lifting sanctions against the Castro regime—on travel, remittances, trade—more difficult for President Obama.

Sadly, the human-rights situation on the island remains dismal, despite new leadership. According to HRW, the Raúl Castro government has harassed and imprisoned dissidents using an Orwellian provision of the Cuban Criminal Code that punishes "dangerousness." Authorities can lock up individuals on the suspicion that they may commit a crime in the future, or for engaging in behavior that is "antisocial" or contrary to "socialist morality."

Among the activities the government has deemed "dangerous" are: handing out copies of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, failing to attend pro-government rallies, or simply being unemployed. In its report, based on more than 60 interviews carried out in Cuba without official permission or by phone from abroad, HRW documented more than 40 cases of dissidents who have been sentenced for "dangerousness."

Cuban law is replete with laws like the "dangerousness" provision that may be used to punish anyone seen as critical of the government. Human-rights defenders, journalists, political activists and others charged with breaking such laws find themselves at the mercy of a system that violates virtually every due process right.

Political detainees are denied access to legal counsel and family visits. They are subjected to abusive interrogations, and they may be detained for months or even years without being charged. Trials are pure theater, mostly conducted behind closed doors and finished in minutes.

Once in prison, abuse is commonplace. On Dec. 10, 2008—Human Rights Day—a political prisoner tried to read aloud to fellow prisoners from a book his wife had brought him called "Your Rights." In response, a guard came into his cell and told him to eat the book. When the prisoner refused, he was beaten and later sentenced to six more years in prison for "disrespecting authority."

Dissidents are subjected to public "acts of repudiation," in which crowds gather outside of their homes, throwing stones, shouting threats, and sometimes physically assaulting them. Those labeled "counterrevolutionaries" are fired from their jobs, monitored, threatened and prevented from traveling. The beating of dissident blogger Yoani Sánchez by two men she says were Cuban agents in civilian clothes in Havana just two weeks ago is further proof of this regrettable state of affairs.

Without outside pressure, the human-rights situation in Cuba will not improve. But outside pressure—sadly absent today, in the case of Europe or Latin America—has proved insufficient. At the same time, the U.S. embargo policy has been a unmitigated failure.

The logical route to follow is the one HRW and others have suggested: The U.S. should shift from a policy of regime change to a policy of human-rights promotion. The Obama administration should approach the European Union and the Latin American democracies and offer to lift the embargo on the condition that these countries join the U.S. in pressuring Cuba on a single demand: the release of all political prisoners, including those incarcerated for "dangerousness."

Once the U.S. government has secured this commitment and a multilateral coalition is in place, the U.S. should end its failed embargo policy. Cuba should be given a brief and specified period—the report recommends six months—to release all of its political prisoners.

If the government of Raúl Castro complies, it will set in motion a process whose ultimate goal is the full normalization of relations with the U.S. and the EU, as well as compliance with the democratic standards of the Organization of American States. If it does not, this multilateral coalition should enact targeted sanctions directed at the leadership of the Castro government.

The Castro brothers know that nothing would be more threatening to their half-century monopoly on power than the end of the U.S. embargo, which they use as a justification for their ongoing abuses. Indeed, they appear to be deliberately sabotaging normalization by making the human-rights situation worse.

This is why a multilateral approach is crucial. According to the Spanish daily El País, President Obama asked Spanish Prime Minister Rodríguez Zapatero three weeks ago to "Tell the Cubans we are taking steps, but if they don't take them too, it will be very difficult for us to continue." The Obama administration gets it. Now, if only we could get more Latin American countries to stop countenancing Cuba's human-rights violations and play a constructive role.

Mr. Castaneda, a professor at New York University and fellow at the New America Foundation, was Mexico's foreign minister from 2000 to 2003.
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#143 - Posted 20 November 2009, 8:45 PM
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RE: Cuba cuts back on rationed products-Commies are throwing in the Towel and circle the drain
You think ABC and the other commies care about Human Rights??

They give all radical leftists the benefit of the doubt but love to hate the US!

Human rights for leftist terrorists, Muslim jihadists but screw those Cubans...
Los enemigos de la Patria, por consiguiente nuestros, están todos muy acordes en estas ideas; destruir la nacionalidad aunque para ello sea preciso aniquilar a la Nación entera

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#144 - Posted 22 November 2009, 3:54 PM
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RE: Cuba cuts back on rationed products-Commies are throwing in the Towel and circle the drain
Human rights in Cuba are not less than in US or other Latin America Country.
"PROUD & Glad to have a Spanish last name and ancestry"

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#145 - Posted 22 November 2009, 8:59 PM
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RE: Cuba cuts back on rationed products-Commies are throwing in the Towel and circle the drain
"Human rights in Cuba are not less than in US or other Latin America Country."

Sorry Popon ,but if you were in Cuba you would not be able to write freely like you do here nor would you be able to choose leaders with different ideas ,you would not be able to move without government approval.

Kind of weird to attribute equal human rights to democracies and dictatorships while writing from a democracy..
Edited on 11/22/2009 9:15 PM by Pepe32.
Los enemigos de la Patria, por consiguiente nuestros, están todos muy acordes en estas ideas; destruir la nacionalidad aunque para ello sea preciso aniquilar a la Nación entera

si vis pacem para bellum
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#146 - Posted 23 November 2009, 3:54 PM
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RE: Cuba cuts back on rationed products-Commies are throwing in the Towel and circle the drain

By THE ECONOMIST

Published: Monday, November 23, 2009 at 3:00 a.m.
Last Modified: Friday, November 20, 2009 at 12:38 p.m.

Those who hoped that the arrival in power of Barack Obama and Raul Castro would bring a thaw in the continuing 50-year cold war between the United States and Cuba so far have little to cheer.

The Obama administration has lifted restrictions imposed by George W. Bush on visits and remittances to the island by Cuban-Americans and has resumed discreet talks on cooperation in practical matters such as migration, drug trafficking and postal services. But administration officials have said that they will not lift the economic embargo imposed on Fidel Castro’s regime

in 1960 until Cuba takes steps toward political and economic freedom.

For his part, Raul Castro, who replaced his brother at the head of Cuba’s government in 2006, has offered to talk to the Americans but insists that the island’s communist political system is non-negotiable.

On both sides there are pressures for further change.

These are more visible in the United States. On Thursday, the foreign relations committee of the House of Representatives discussed a bill to lift the ban on Americans traveling to Cuba. Supporters of this measure claim to have close to the 218 House votes required to approve it. Its chances in the Senate look slimmer.

Public opinion favors ending the travel ban. More surprisingly, a recent poll found that a majority of Cuban-American respondents do, too. But most Republicans and some influential Democrats still support the embargo.

The administration has been guarded on the travel ban. But if it is lifted, the rest of the embargo might soon follow as different business lobbies press for a piece of the action in Cuba, says Julia Sweig of the Council on Foreign Relations, a think tank. U.S. hotel companies would doubtless want to be allowed to invest there, for example.

In Cuba, meanwhile, the police state remains intact.

In a report released last week, Human Rights Watch, a non-governmental organization, says that Raul Castro’s government has made greater use of a provision of the criminal code that allows indefinite detention for “dangerousness,” defined as conduct “in manifest contradiction to the norms of socialist morality.”

The report, based on an undercover investigation, states that at least 40 Cubans have recently been jailed under this provision for trying to exercise basic rights, such as staging peaceful marches or writing critical news articles. (On Nov. 6, Cuba’s most prominent independent blogger, Yoani Sanchez, was forced into an unmarked car, beaten and threatened, before being dumped on the street.) There are at least 200 political prisoners, and probably many more: Cuba is one of only eight countries in the world that denies the International Committee of the Red Cross access to its prisons.

While Cuba justifies all this as self-defense against repeated U.S. attempts to overthrow the Castro regime, in fact it is aimed at enforcing political conformity, argues Human Rights Watch. It wants the United States, before lifting the embargo, to secure a commitment from Europe and Latin America to press for the release of political prisoners.

That looks naive. Many left-wing governments in Latin America apply a double standard when it comes to human rights: While suspending the not very repressive de facto civilian government in Honduras from the Organization of American States, they want Cuba to rejoin. (After the coup in June that toppled Manuel Zelaya, Honduras’ president, Raul Castro, with no apparent irony, even joined calls for an economic embargo against the country.)

The European Union has normal economic ties with Cuba, but is critical of its trampling of human rights. Spain’s foreign minister, Miguel Moratinos, has said that he wants to use his country’s six-month presidency of the EU from January to soften that policy.

Just as the U.S. embargo has been futile and counterproductive, there is no evidence that “engagement” by Europeans or Latin Americans has much impact in Havana.

In the end, if change comes to Cuba it will be from within. Raul Castro has launched a wide-ranging public debate on the economy and is taking modest steps toward more reliance on market mechanisms. The changes are aimed at preserving communist control, and their pace will be glacial as long as Fidel remains alive. But there can be little doubt that a lifting of the U.S. embargo would help those within the regime in Havana who want to move in a more liberal direction.
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#147 - Posted 4 July 2010, 2:04 AM
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#148 - Posted 4 July 2010, 6:36 AM
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Suspect in Cuba Bombings Is Seized-Authorities to turn him over to Interpol to be sent to Cuba,
Suspect in Cuba Bombings Is Seized
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: July 3, 2010


CARACAS, Venezuela — A Salvadoran man wanted by Cuba in a series of bombings has been arrested with a false passport at the Caracas airport, according to President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela.

President Chávez said on Friday that the suspect, Francisco Chávez Abarca, was detained by Venezuelan intelligence agents as he arrived at the airport on Thursday. He is accused of placing bombs in Havana in 1997.

The president called Mr. Chávez a close associate of the Cuban militant Luis Posada Carriles, a former C.I.A. operative who is wanted in connection with the 1976 bombing of a Cuban plane that killed 73 people.

“I’m sure this man didn’t come here for tourism,” the president said. “He came here to place bombs, to see how to hunt an objective that has a price: my head.” President Chávez said the Cuban authorities believe that Mr. Chávez placed an explosive that damaged a hotel disco on April 2, 1997, and one later that month that failed to explode on the 15th floor of the same hotel.

Cuba also suspects him in the bombing of a Cuban government tourist office in Mexico on May 24, 1997, the president said, and of recruiting others to bomb tourist sites in Cuba in 1997 and 1998.

The Venezuelan authorities plan to turn Mr. Chávez over to Interpol to be sent to Cuba, the president said.
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#149 - Posted 4 July 2010, 6:44 AM
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RE: Suspect in Cuba Bombings Is Seized-Authorities to turn him over to Interpol to be sent to Cuba,
Venezuela says arrests Salvador terrorist suspect


CARACAS | Fri Jul 2, 2010 5:28pm EDT
(Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said on Friday security forces arrested a member of a gang led by accused plane bomber Luis Posada Carriles and suggested the El Salvadorian suspect planned to kill him.

Chavez said Francisco Chavez Abarca was arrested on Thursday when he arrived at Maiquetia International Airport in Caracas.

"We captured a major terrorist. ... He was using a fake name and is on Interpol's red list because he is part of Posada Carriles' gang," the president said in a televised speech.

"Why did he come to Venezuela? My heart tells me that this gentleman was coming here to kill me."

Carriles, a former CIA operative and Cuban exile, is wanted in Cuba and Venezuela on charges including masterminding the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed 73 people.

The anti-Castro militant told The New York Times in 1998 that he plotted a string of bomb blasts in Havana hotels that had killed an Italian the year before. He later denied saying so.

A Cuban-born naturalized Venezuelan, Posada Carriles escaped from a high security prison in Venezuela in 1985. He was arrested in the United States on immigration charges a decade later, but was freed in 2007.

Chavez, who has accused Posada Carriles of trying to kill him several times, has repeatedly called for Washington to extradite him to stand trial in Caracas, describing him as "the biggest terrorist in the history of Latin America."
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#150 - Posted 4 July 2010, 6:59 AM
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RE: Suspect in Cuba Bombings Is Seized-Authorities to turn him over to Interpol to be sent to Cuba,
Accomplice of Posada Carriles Captured in Venezuela
Havana, Cuba, July 2.- Hugo Chavez, president of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, announced on Friday that terrorist Francisco Chavez Abarca, of Salvadoran origin and considered Luis Posada Carriles’ right-hand man, was captured on Thursday when he was trying to enter that South American country.

During a speech at Miraflores Palace, the head of state informed that Abarca was arrested at the Maiquetia Airport and sent to the Bolivarian Intelligence Service to be interrogated, the TeleSur network reports.

Called "El Panzon" , this man is wanted by Interpol due to his connections with several terrorist attacks with explosives carried out in Cuba in the 1990’s, among them the one that killed young Italian tourist Fabio di Celmo on September 4, 1997.

"What did Chavez Abarca want in Venezuela? Who was waiting for him?” asked the President, adding that the arrested man will be turned in to Interpol to be sent to Cuba, which requested his capture.

"This gentleman came here to kill me (...), my heart tells me that", pointed out the Bolivarian leader. He also said that amid the development of the revolution and when parliamentary elections are close (September), "it’s very strange that a terrorist of this
calibre comes here."

"Posada Carriles should be quite nervous, because we have apprehended one of his men", he added.

This criminal was in prison in El Salvador for two years for being the head of a band that stole cars, but justice avoided to try him for the international crimes he was being accused of, comments TeleSur.

Under the alias of Manuel Gonzalez, Roberto Solórzano and William Gonzalez, he made three short trips to Cuba, in April and May, 1997, to carry out terrorist attacks.

On April 12 of that same year, he activated a bomb that caused damages in the bathrooms of the Ache Disco of Havana’s Melia Cohiba Hotel, and on April 30 and explosive device that the Salvadorean had placed in a flowerpot on floor 15 of that facility could be deactivated.

While in Mexico, a bomb exploded on May 24 at the entrance of the offices of Cuba’s Cubanacan Corporation in the capital of the Aztec nation.

Following Posada Carriles’s instructions, he hired mercenary Ernesto Cruz Leon to carry out terrorist actions in Cuba, one of which killed di Celmo.

Also during his Friday speech, the Venezuelan President recalled that, five years ago, his government presented an official request to Washington for the extradition of Posada Carriles, a former Central Intelligence Agency agent and the man responsible for the terrorist attack against a Cubana airliner in 1976, which killed all 73 people on board. (ACN)
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