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Democracy and dissident
Aid-to-Cuba
progam caught in crossfire of criticism on island and in United
States
BY ALFONSO
CHARDY
achardy@herald.com
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HELP: Support Group for Democracy members
Rene Sotolongo, left, Pedro Pérez and Elias González
pack items for families of Cuban dissidents. DONNA E.
NATALE PLANAS/HERALD STAFF |
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Every morning in Coral Gables, workers
gather on the top floor of a three-story building to do their part
to fight Fidel Castro -- filling white plastic bags with shampoo,
toothpaste, medicines, vitamins, canned food, underwear and sandals.
The bags are shipped to families of Cuban dissidents imprisoned for
alleged crimes against the Castro government.
''This is the meat and potatoes of our work, what families of
dissidents need to survive,'' said Frank Hernández Trujillo,
executive director of Support Group for Democracy.
It is one of more than two dozen organizations, several of which are
based in South Florida, that form the USAID Cuba Program, an
ambitious U.S.-funded initiative to promote and bolster democratic
movements on the communist island.
In recent weeks, the program has drawn a firestorm of criticism from
Castro and other top Cuban officials who have denounced it as an
orchestrated campaign by the Bush administration to subvert the
island's government.
The program, whose scope ranges from supporting human rights
activists and independent journalists to producing post-communist
plans for
Cuba, has become ensnared in the recent tensions between the United
States and Cuba, triggered by Castro's severe crackdown on
dissidents.
''Today, the so-called dissidents, actually mercenaries on the
payroll of the Bush Hitler-like government, are betraying not only
their homeland but all of humanity as well,'' Castro said at a May
Day rally.
The program's director says the
U.S. government does not provide money to dissidents and is simply
trying to help budding, but struggling and oppressed, democratic
voices.
''If discussing democracy and providing books written by Martin
Luther King . . . and others is subversion, I don't think by
American standards that's the case,'' said Adolfo Franco, an
assistant administrator for the U.S. Agency for International
Development. ``We are not doing anything subversive. It's to support
the growing civil society movement on the island.''
NARROW FOCUS
But some critics say the program is too narrowly focused on a
relatively small dissident movement and should reach out to a
broader spectrum of Cubans, and that many funded groups are
dominated by Cuban exiles with conservative viewpoints.
''We should express our support for a more open society, but we must
not be involved in efforts to bring about a different system in
Cuba,'' said Wayne Smith, senior fellow at the Washington-based
Center for International Policy and a former head of the U.S.
diplomatic mission in
Havana.
``That gets into regime change and away from a diplomatic role.''
But Franco said the recent wave of repression in
Cuba shows that the program is making inroads in helping establish a
more independent society.
''The outrageous arrests and violations of human rights that have
taken place in
Cuba . . . in and of itself demonstrates that the program has had an
impact in Cuba,'' he said.
The
Cuba program grew out of congressional measures passed in the 1990s
to assist people and groups in Cuba working for nonviolent change.
The first grant in 1996 was awarded to Freedom House, a human rights
group in
Washington,
D.C, to ship books, videos and typewriters to dissidents.
Since then the number of groups and the amount of money allocated
for the program have grown significantly. This year, the federal
government is distributing $6 million to
Cuba program organizations. Over the years, about $23 million has
been allocated for the program.
Many groups are based in
Washington, but several are in South Florida, including CubaNet,
which publishes stories by dissident journalists; a Florida
International University program to train Cuban reporters by mail;
and a transition project at the University of Miami.
''The goal is to prepare the Cuban people to understand the process
of reconstruction in
Cuba,'' said Jaime Suchlicki, director of UM's Institute for Cuban
and Cuban-American Studies. 'That's why we are casting a wide net in
academia to do research and provide the best thinkers, the best
ideas and policy options. We are not laying down dictates to the
people of Cuba and saying, `Here, this is what you must do.' We are
just giving them a menu of options from which they can pick and
choose what they want to do.''
While the
Cuba program funds a variety of groups, it is difficult to assess
how effective it has been in carving out a democratic niche in Cuba.
An independent evaluation three years ago noted that it is virtually
impossible to gather data in
Cuba's
closed society.
SOME CONCERNS
But the report by PriceWaterhouseCoopers did raise some concerns.
The program, it said, has not done enough to encourage ``solidarity
or coalition building among human rights activists within
Cuba. To the extent that the democratic opposition is splintered, it
is vulnerable to repression, penetration and manipulation by Cuban
government forces.''
While the report cautioned against drawing parallels to
Eastern Europe, some of the methods used to encourage change there
could be applied in Cuba as long as they are tailored to conditions
there.
''The AID
Cuba program is a pivotal source in making sure that folks in Cuba
have access to information, to disseminate their materials and
access to computers, faxes and radios,'' said Rep. Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen, R-Miami. ``Low-tech or high-tech, it's an opportunity
to discuss important topics such as democracy and liberty, freedom
of expression, basic principles the United States holds firm.'' |