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Politics : About that Cuban boy, Elian -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: The Barracuda™ who wrote (4324)5/5/2000 10:30:00 AM
From: gao seng  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9127
 
Of Child Abuse, Castro Style

Wall St. Journal, May 5, 200
________________________________________

I was in solitary confinement in Fidel Castro's tropical gulag
-- where I spent 22 years for refusing to pledge allegiance to
the Communist regime -- when I heard a child's voice
whimpering. "Get me out of here! Get me out of here! I want
to see my mommy!" I thought my senses were failing me. I
could not believe that they had imprisoned a child in those
dungeons. Later on, I learned the story of Robertico.

He was 12 years old when they arrested him. A captain in the
political police had left his gun in his open car. When he
returned to the car he saw the child playing with it. He slapped
Robertico and took him into custody. The child was sent to an
adult prison in Havana, where he was condemned to spend
the rest of his youth. He would not be released until he
reached the age of 18.

Robertico was sent to a galley with common criminals. Within
a few days, those soulless prisoners raped him. He spent
several days in the hospital for treatment of rents and
hemorrhages as a result. By the time he was released, his file
had been stamped "homosexual" and he was taken to the
prison area reserved for this classification.

Robertico was so slender that his body fit through the bars of
the cells. One night he slipped out to watch cartoons on the
guard's television. When he was discovered, he was sent to
the punishment cells. He was taken out of those cells three
times a week for injections because he was suffering from a
venereal disease. A guard told me he was so young he did not
even have pubic hair.

When I think of Elian Gonzalez, Robertico always comes to
mind. This is the Cuban society to which Elian may return: a
society where all rights are violated in the interest of
subordinating all individuals to the will of the supreme leader.

Sadly, some in America still believe that the Cuban revolution
was a triumph of good. It is worth remembering that many
also refused to believe the horrors of the Nazi extermination
camps. Then, the world had to wait for eyewitness accounts
from journalists and photographic evidence from their camera
crews before finally accepting the horrible reality of what had
happened.

Many other Americans seem to believe that even if savage
things once happened under Fidel Castro, the situation has
now changed. Yet the same dictatorship, which sanctioned the
abuse of Robertico and has tortured thousands of political
prisoners, is still wielding absolute power over the Cuban
people. Fidel Castro has never recanted or apologized for the
atrocities that have been reported by those who have escaped
his grasp. And there is a stream of evidence that the brutality
and repression continues. Last month the United Nations
Human Rights Commission condemned Cuba, for the eighth
time, for its systematic violation of human rights. Amnesty
International and the U.S. State Department have done the
same.

It is standard practice around the world to transfer the custody
of children to the surviving parent when the other dies. That is
what is normal. But Cuba is not a normal place. If Elian is
returned to Cuba, he will be sent back to a place where most
people dream every day of escape. It is an island prison where
a cruel tyranny has now lasted almost half a century. A fifth
of the country's population -- around two million people --
have fled, and more than half-a-million have been courageous
enough to apply for visas to leave.

Outside of Cuba, Elian will grow up as a free person with a
free conscience. But if he returns, he will be "reprogrammed,"
as Castro himself has made clear. The Cuban government has
already shown the world the residence where psychiatrists and
psychologists will instruct Elian on how to despise and hate
anyone who is against communism -- including his own
mother, who gave her life to bring him to freedom. In a few
years she'll be nothing but a traitor to the Revolution. If Elian
returns to Cuba his father will have no authority whatsoever
to make decisions related to his education. Cuban "law" gives
that authority to the Communist government.

Children are indoctrinated in Cuba from the moment they start
to read. They are taught that the Communist party is owed
loyalty above everything else. And they are taught that they
must denounce their parents if they criticize or do anything
against the Revolution or its leaders.

For Elian, absolute control by the Communist party will begin
in elementary school with the so-called "Cumulative School
File." This is a little like a report card, but it is not limited to
academic achievements. It measures "revolutionary
integration," not only of the student but also of his family.
This file documents whether or not the child and family
participate in mass demonstrations, or whether they belong to
a church or religious group. The file accompanies the child for
life, and is continually updated. His university options will
depend on what that file says. If he does not profess a truly
Marxist life, he will be denied many career possibilities.

From his elementary school days on, he will hear that God
does not exist, and that religion is "the opium of the masses."
If any student speaks about God, his parents will be called to
the school, warned that they are "confusing" the child and
threatened. The Code for Children, Youth and Family
provides for a three-year prison sentence for any parent who
teaches a child ideas contrary to communism. The code is
very clear: No Cuban parent has the right to "deform" the
ideology of his children, and the state is the true "Father."
Article 8 of that same code reads, "Society and the state work
for the efficient protection of youth against all influences
contrary to their Communist formation." It is mandatory for
all Cuban children over the age of 12 to do time in a
Communist work camp in the countryside. Away from all
parental supervision for nine months at a time, children there
suffer from venereal disease, as well as teenage pregnancy,
which inevitably ends in forced abortion.

When the reprogramming plan for Elian is complete, we will
see him repeating the slogans of the Revolution. He will have
lost his liberty, his ability to dream, his youthful innocence,
and perhaps even hope.

And should he ever do anything that angers the regime, we
must hope he will not end like Robertico, cornered in a cell,
calling for his mother. This time, she will not be able to save
him.
__________________________________________

By Armando Valladares. Mr. Valladares was
U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Human Rights Commission
from 1986-1990. He is the author of the best-seller "Against
All Hope," which will be rereleased in October by Encounter
Books.



To: The Barracuda™ who wrote (4324)5/6/2000 12:37:00 PM
From: Alexandermf  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9127
 
It was a simple question?