Diario de Cuba’s Editorial on Its 15th Anniversary

On December 4 , Diario de Cuba, a daily Internet Cuban diary (in Spanish and English) published in Madrid, Spain, celebrated its 15th anniversary with the following editorial.[1]

“Exactly 15 years ago, the first news and articles from this newspaper appeared on the screens of some readers. Over the course of this decade and a half, changes have taken place in Cuba, but not those necessary for the country’s democratization.”

“Fidel Castro died—which for many seemed not only unimaginable, but impossible—and something else happened that had seemed impossible: the people took to the streets to protest their living conditions. The regime in Havana opened an embassy in Washington, Washington opened an embassy in Havana, and the rapprochement between the two countries, arranged by President Obama, was ultimately sabotaged by the Cuban regime.”

“With Miguel Díaz-Canel chosen by Raúl Castro, the first revolutionary leader who did not participate in the armed struggle rose to the presidency of the country and the secretariat of its sole party. Almost the country’s entire productive economy passed into the hands of the military conglomerate GAESA , which has set about building hotels while ignoring the downturn in tourism and ruling out investments much needed for the Cuban population.”

“The country became even more indebted and, in a vicious circle, persisted in its tradition of shirking its financial obligations. The authorities implemented the most ill-advised monetary policies possible, so inflation runs rampant in Cuba. Medical professionals and technicians have been, and continue to be, exploited by means of contracts lucrative for the regime but exploitive for them.”

“In response to the popular protests, the regime ratcheted up its repression against dissidents, activists and independent journalists, as the Justice system was turned into an ever stronger mechanism of repression , and the number of political prisoners grew. Censorship of thought and the arts intensified, and those young artists who protested ended up in prison or having to go into exile.”

“The migratory wave in the history of the country began, and the emigration of the youngest Cubans, along with low birth rates, has contributed to a largest acute aging of the population . Every day it is more and more difficult to have children in Cuba. Elderly Cubans are more vulnerable than ever. The regime used to have a “monopoly” on violence, but now cities and towns are no longer safe. Public insecurity is on the rise, gangs of young people are forming, and VAW is claiming more and more victims.”

“Each new state measure manages to render agriculture and livestock even more unproductive. Cuba, once the world’s largest exporter of sugar, has been fallen apart, with the country now importing sugar for several years. The only plant that grows in Cuba is marabou, and farmers determined to make the land produce are hampered by new restrictions. Meanwhile, no less onerous burdens weigh on entrepreneurs, who have been allowed, reluctantly, to start MSMEs.”

“Health and education, which for decades were the regime’s showpieces, have collapsed, their decline evident in the unhealthy state of hospital facilities and students’ poor results. Sports, another point of pride for socialism, are suffering a similar fate. Not even baseball is spared. Just as Cuba ceased to be a sugar powerhouse, it has now ceased to be a baseball power too.”

“In the last 15 years the regime has been dismantling the welfare system with which it had mitigated social inequalities, to the point that it no longer addresses the fate of the most disadvantaged . Today we can talk about the end of the grocery store book and rationing card. With blackout after blackout, the island has been sunk in darkness, and the national electrical system can no longer hold up. The last hurricanes to hit the island have highlighted the ineffectiveness of its on-effective civil defense system.”

“Old, dilapidated buildings continue, inexorably, to collapse, and the construction of new homes is an unresolved problem in every government plan. Vagrants, homeless people, and children who work, or beg, are becoming more common on Cuban streets. Meanwhile, his heirs of the regime’s elite boast on social media about what their parents have stolen, and continue to steal.”

“The Cuban regime cultivates alliances with nations like Russia, China, Iran and North Korea, and continues to meddle in Venezuela’s politics. It no longer operates based on any ideology, but rather on the exercise of brute force, and continues to mutate towards a dictatorship shamelessly open to benefiting a fortunate few.”

“Over the course of this last decade and a half, DIARIO DE CUBA has been there, studying and covering the scenarios briefly summarized above. In celebration of its birthday, last October the “For the Cuba of Tomorrow” DDC Forum was held in Madrid. Through it, and its day-to-day work, DDC demonstrates its commitment to the Cuba of the future.”

“On this anniversary, all that remains is to thank all our contributors and readers, and to renew this publication’s commitment to Cuba and to Cuban democracy.”

Reactions

As a U.S. citizen with some connections with Cuba, including three visits to the island at the start of this century, conversations with Cubans who have visited the U.S. and carefully following the published news about Cuba, especially those in Diario de Cuba, and writing blog posts about same,[2] I concur in most of this editorial’s observations.

However, although agreeing that U.S. President Obama had taken steps for “rapprochement between the two countries,” I think it is overstatement to claim that this effort was “ultimately sabotaged by the Cuban regime.” Obama’s successor (President Donald Trump) reversed some of those steps and the whole psychology of improving the relationship and even President Biden has not returned to the Obama effort.[3]

Recently a group of 15 U.S. Congress Representatives wrote a letter to President Biden urgently requesting “immediate action to stabilize Cuba’s energy infrastructure and provide critical humanitarian assistance. The Cuban people are currently facing widespread blackouts and an escalating energy crisis, exacerbated by the impact of Hurricane Rafael. The situation is not only causing immense suffering for the Cuban people but also poses serious risks to U.S. national security interests. If left unaddressed, the crisis will almost certainly fuel increased migration, strain U.S. border management systems, and fully destabilize the already-strained Caribbean region.”[4]

Therefore, these Congressmen “strongly” recommended “removing Cuba from the State Sponsors of Terrorism (SSOT) list” and suspending “sanctions that hinder the flow of humanitarian assistance, including restoring the EAR license exception to allow donations to Cuban health and humanitarian relief entities.” This blogger endorsed those recommendations plus asking President Biden to “eliminate the U.S. embargo of Cuba. . . .“

=======================

[1]  Editorial: DIARIO DE CUBA Turns 15, Diario de Cuba (Dec. 4, 2024)..

[2]  See List of Posts to dwkcommentaries—Topical: CUBA [as of 5/4/20}.The labor of manually preparing updates to this list has discouraged the blogger from creating similar subsequent lists.

[3] See the posts listed in these sections (U.S. (Obama) & Cuba Relations (Normalization), 2014; U.S. (Obama) & Cuba Relations (Normalization), 2015); U.S. (Obama) & Cuba Relations (Normalization), 2016);and U.S. (Obama) & Cuba Relations (Normalization), 2017; U.S. (Trump) & Cuba Relations, 2016-17) of List of Posts to dwkcommentaries– Topical: CUBA [as of 5/4/20}.

[4] U.S. Congressmen Ask President Biden To Provide Sanctions Relief and Other Aid to Cuba, dwkcommentaries.com (Nov. 20, 2024).

Almost All Cubans Suffer Worst Economic Crisis in the History of the Western Hemisphere   

This indictment is handed out by Roberto Alvarez-Quinones, a Cuban journalist, economist and historian who after working in Cuba for Granma and Cuban television stations has been doing that work since 1996 in Los Angeles, California.[1]

Summary of His Indictment

“Never in the history of the entire West has there been such an overwhelming economic and social crisis that it has affected practically 99% of the total population of a country, without having been caused by a natural catastrophe or a war, but by the Government of the nation.”

That record is held by Castroism . The current Cuban crisis is unprecedented, deplorably exceptional. It strikes today and with no possible solution in sight, because the dictator Raúl “El Cruel” refuses to dismantle the political-economic-social system that has caused the collapse of the economy and of Cuba in general.”

One example of the current collapse is Cuban sugar production. “Today, without a global crisis, and with the international price of sugar higher than ever on average (26 cents per pound at the end of November, Cuba produces 390,000 tons of sugar and imports . . . [more] to cover national consumption.”

The reason, Quinones says, is that “there is no free market, which creates wealth, distributes it and regulates the market. . . . Communist -Castro totalitarianism prevents the existence of the natural spectrum of seven social categories that exist in normal (capitalist) countries: very rich, rich, upper middle class, lower middle class, poor, very poor and the totally helpless. This diverse social range is reduced in Cuba to first, second, and third class citizens.”

“At the top of that social pyramid is embedded a tiny, very rich and privileged patriciate, screwed in power, or attached to it by family, “historical” ties, very high bureaucracy, or by lucrative mafia commitments. My estimate is that this elite of communist first-class citizens may belong between 0.02% and 0.03% of the total population. We are talking about between 2,140 and 3,210 people more or less, in a total population of 10.7 million inhabitants. . . . That Castro patriciate is practically immune to the crisis, although not completely. Only the dictator, the most conspicuous historical figures such as Ramiro Valdés, Machado Ventura, Guillermo García, Alvaro López Miera and his families have absolute immunity, and a few more privileged high-ranking officials and civilians. They make up the crème de la crème of the regime.”

“Then come those who the communist claque considers second class citizens, despite the fact that they enjoy some advantages, these not of political, historical or caste origin, but because they have a lot of money, or receive remittances and packages from their relatives abroad. They are rich peasants, business owners, MSMEs plugged into the dictatorship, and the 28% of ‘dollarized’ Cubans who can buy in shopping malls. The rich in this case are ‘virtual,’ holograms. They accumulate money that they have no way to spend or invest. The State does not produce anything to offer them, and it matters less and less. And the sale of land and rental of real estate, or entire beaches, is only for foreign capitalists.”

“We then reach the most oppressed or third class citizens. Poor, extremely poor, and helpless. The vast majority are very poor since they receive a daily income of less than $2.15 a day, the minimum established by the World Bank to identify extreme poverty.”

“Battered by one of the highest inflation rates in the world and a staggering devaluation of the peso, today the average salary in Cuba, of about 5,000 pesos (40.65 dollars), barely covers 29.4% of the family basket, almost 17,000 pesos (138 dollars).”

“And the Cuban minimum wage is 17.64 dollars per month (2,170 pesos), almost eight times lower than the cost of the basic basket.”

“[T]he pensions of the 1.7 million retirees are 1,901 pesos per month on average, nine times less than what the basic basket costs. How do the elderly manage to eat and satisfy their minimum needs? The Government doesn’t give a damn about that. It is already known that if they die of hunger they attribute the death to other causes.”

“The [Cuban] Minister of Agriculture, Ydael Pérez, admitted that the production of pork, rice and beans (basic foods in Cuba) fell by more than 80% this year compared to 2019. Only “40% of the fuel has been imported”  . . . [and] 4% of fertilizers and 20% of animal feed. Chicken imports from the US fell 40% in September, compared to August. The debacle of national production aggravates everything. Already on the black market, a carton of 30 eggs costs 3,000 pesos, 38% more than a full minimum wage.”

In short, Cuba is suffering a “suffocating crisis consciously caused to more than 99% of the inhabitants. Something never seen in the Western world.”

==============================

[1] Quinones, 99% of the population of Cuba suffers the worst economic crisis ever in America, Diario de Cuba (Dec. 9, 2023); Roberto Alvarez-Quinones, Hispanic L.A.