Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! newspaper articles No 178

Miami 5 appeal – a step nearer victory?

On 10 March, the appeal of the Miami 5 opened at the 11th Circuit Court in Miami. 700-plus pages of evidence had already been presented to the three appeal judges by lawyers for the five Cubans who were arrested as ‘spies’ by the FBI in 1998 and are now serving sentences ranging from 15 years to life in federal prisons across the US. The lawyers are appealing against the findings of the original trial on a number of grounds including:

  • Insufficient evidence linking Gerardo Hernandez to Cuba’s shooting down of two ‘Brothers to the Rescue’ planes over Cuban waters in 1996 to justify a conviction for conspiracy to murder.
  • Insufficient evidence against Antonio Guerrero and others to justify federal spying convictions.
  • prejudicial nature of the original trial being held in Miami, making it impossible for the defendants to receive a fair trial. Some exiles attended the trial in military uniform, making clear their membership of paramilitary groups. Jury members later admitted they had felt intimidated.
  • ous irregularities in gathering evidence against the five, including illegal entry into their homes and illegal seizure of their computers; the seizure of personal papers making it impossible for them to prepare their defence adequately.
  • ssive sentencing on the basis of the charges brought for espionage which even in the prosecution case amounted to little more than ‘a flea on a pimple of the US’, according to Guerrero’s lawyer, Leonard Weinglass. Even senior military officials testified at the trial that the data gathered by the five was neither secret nor classified.
  • fact that the original trial judge refused to allow the jury to consider a defence of ‘necessity’ – that the five Cubans were acting to prevent the greater evil of terrorist attacks on their country emanating from Miami’s violent counter-revolutionary Cuban exile groups.

The judges will not present their ruling for several months. However, laywers for the five men admitted they had been encouraged by the judges’ line of questioning of the prosecutor, grilling her about the details of the evidence linking Gerardo Hernandez to the 1996 attack on the Brothers to the Rescue plane. One pointed out that a murder conspiracy conviction required ‘a plot to down planes in international airspace, not over Cuba after 25 incursions into Cuba’s airspace by planes from a Cuban exile group in 20 months’. Paul McKenna, lawyer for Gerardo Hernandez, felt the government had been forced onto the defensive.

Meanwhile, the US continues its harassment of the families and supporters of the Five. It has continued to refuse visas to family members trying to visit the five men, or moved them suddenly to other gaols. It has also attempted to withhold solidarity funds sent to the US-based National Committee to Free the 5 by French and Spanish groups. Eventually the money was recovered and helped fund a full-page advertisement in the New York Times on 3 March. It read: ‘Can you be imprisoned in the United States for opposing terrorism? Yes, if you oppose terrorism in Miami. Free the Cuban Five!’ Meanwhile, regular mass demonstrations for the Miami 5 continue in Cuba, and around the world support for their cause is growing.

Hannah Caller

More information is available on: www.freethefive.org

From Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! April/May 2004

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

US ratchets up pressure against Cuba

Haiti is Cuba’s closest neighbour in the Caribbean. The two countries share a common history of sugar plantations, slavery and colonial exploitation. Both have had wars and revolutions to overthrow their colonial masters. The revolution in Haiti in 1804 against the French established the world’s first black republic. In Cuba the 19th century wars of liberation against the Spanish colonialists finally culminated in the revolution of 1959 that threw out the US imperialists and their puppets who had usurped the Spanish role. Yet the paths then taken by the two countries have been very different, as JIM CRAVEN reports.

In the late 1950s, conditions for the vast majority of both the Cuban and the Haitian people were appalling. Infant mortality in Haiti was 170 deaths per 1,000 live births and life expectancy was just 47 years. Cubans were marginally better off, with infant mortality at 60 and life expectancy 59 years. Only 3% of rural Cubans had running water; only 4% had meat to eat; health and education services were virtually non-existent.

Development or destitution

Nearly 50 years later, Haiti is now the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere and the fourth poorest in the world. According to UNICEF, 80% of the population live in poverty and 48% in absolute poverty. More than two-thirds of the workforce do not have proper jobs. By 2002 life expectancy had risen to just 49 years and infant mortality stood at 79 deaths per 1,000 live births. Meanwhile, in the same year Cuban life expectancy had risen to 77 years and infant mortality had fallen to less than seven per 1,000, comparable to the richest countries in the world. These indices are partly a product of Cuba’s outstanding childcare system. In Cuba a doctor or midwife attends every birth and every child is inoculated against at least 13 diseases. In Haiti less than 25% of deliveries have skilled healthcare at hand and only about half the children receive any inoculations at all. Cuba has one doctor for every 195 people: the best ratio in the world. According to UNICEF, Haiti has one doctor for every 1,250 people (some sources say one per 4,000!) and 90% of these are in the cities. Only 16% of the Haitian rural population have adequate sanitation and fewer than a third of the total population have access to safe drinking water.

In Haiti primary school attendance is little better than 50% and secondary enrolment is only 20%. As a consequence barely half the Haitian population is in any sense literate. Cuba on the other hand has one of the most successful education systems in the world. It is presently aiming to ensure higher education is available for the whole population.

The combined effect of lack of public health, hygiene and education is tragically illustrated by the extent of HIV/AIDS infection in Haiti. Over 6% of the Haitian population are infected, including at least 12,000 children. Over 200,000 children in Haiti have been orphaned through their parents dying from AIDS. In Cuba, thanks to early intervention, high quality health care and public awareness, the infection rate is less than 0.03%.

Cuban internationalism

There are 332 Cuban doctors working in Haiti alongside 200 other health workers. They work in every area of the country and have around three-quarters of the Haitian people under their care. In these areas infant mortality rates have dropped from 80 to 28. The Cubans have attended 45,000 births, carried out 59,000 operations and vaccinated 370,000 people. It has been estimated that the Cuban health workers have saved nearly 86,000 Haitian lives. There are 247 young Haitians studying at a School of Medicine created by the Cubans in Haiti and another 372 studying on free scholarships in Cuba. The Cubans have also been assisting the Haitians with a radio based literacy programme that has so far taught 110,000 Haitians to read and write, with food, agriculture and veterinary programmes and with technical help for the sugar industry.

Similar countries – different revolutions

How did two countries so similar end up with such starkly different prospects of life for their people? The answer, of course, lies in their economic and social systems. After throwing out the French colonialists in 1804, Haiti was unable to make the transition to an independent state, given the development of economic and social forces at that time. In 1825 the French threatened to invade the country unless the Haitians paid them $125 million. It has been estimated by Dr Francis St Hubert of the Haiti Restitution Committee that repaying that ransom has deprived the Haitian economy of $21 billion at today’s values. By such means, Haiti became a neo-colony of France and, more recently, of the United States. The imperialists have relied on a brutal Haitian elite to maintain their interest. This elite, which accounts for less than 1% of the population, owns more than half the country’s wealth. Together they have continuously extorted wealth from Haiti and the Haitian people and prevented them building any society that even partly catered for the needs of the poor majority. In fact, despite tremendous US opposition, the Aristide government in Haiti did manage to make some improvements for the poor. Now even these small gains have been swept away by the US/French/Canadian-backed imperialist coup.

The lessons of history

At the time of the Cuban revolution many middle class members of the revolutionary movement felt it was enough to rid Cuba of the Batista dictatorship and establish an independent capitalist state free of imperialist influence. In the face of US threats, these people argued for compromise. It was the communist revolutionaries such as Che Guevara, Fidel and Raul Castro who understood there can be no compromise with imperialism. That way inevitably leads to renewed oppression and exploitation. The only way to defend the gains of the national revolution and ensure independence and social development for the people was to destroy imperialism and build socialism. That is what the Cuban people have been doing ever since.

From Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! April/May 2004

 

 

 

Cuba leads ‘the other America’ against FTAA

The US is attempting to subjugate the whole of Latin America through the imposition of the so-called Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). This would give the US unlimited access to Latin American markets without Latin American countries being able to defend themselves against unequal trade by using trade barriers or tariffs. US multinationals would be free to buy up Latin American public sector assets. There would be little control of foreign investments. Foreign companies would gain patent and intellectual property rights to anything they took over. Laws aimed at protecting workers’ rights or the environment could be scrapped if they stood in the way of US multinational expansion. The FTAA is a recipe for rising unemployment, the impoverishment of peasants and small farmers and the degradation of the environment.

When a smaller-scale version of the FTAA, the North Atlantic Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was piloted in Mexico in the 1990s, hundreds of thousands of Mexican farmers went bankrupt as subsidised grain and beef from the US and Canada flooded the market; 1.3 million jobs were lost in agriculture. Meanwhile, half a million Mexicans ended up in sweatshop labour in new ‘maquiladoras’ on the border, simply assembling and returning components made in the US. Three quarters of the Mexican people now live in poverty. But the people of Latin America are fighting back against the FTAA, led by Cuba – the only country to be excluded by the US from the FTAA proposals. Since 2002, Cuba has been warning of the dangerous consequences of the FTAA and mobilising against it.

Since then there have been some important victories with massive demonstrations by the poor at the Cancun meeting of the World Trade Organisation and the Americas Summit in Monterrey giving oppressed countries the backbone to stand up to imperialist demands. At the Third Hemispheric Forum of Struggle against FTAA held in Havana in January, delegates agreed to redouble their efforts to defeat the FTAA before the US deadline for imposition in 2005. Their final declaration, ‘inspired by the revolt of the Bolivian people’, called on the Latin American people to mobilise and demonstrate to force their governments to take a stand in defence of national sovereignty and pledged days of united action across Latin America.

Understanding the link between imperialist economic and military oppression, delegates also called for demonstrations on 20 March alongside those worldwide demanding an end to the occupation of Iraq.

The declaration ended: ‘Our America is not for sale! Neither war nor free trade! Together let us build the other America that is possible!’

Juanjo Rivas

From Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! April/May 2004

 
 
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