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Ninety miles to
freedom - A mother's legacy
By Joyce Mucci
web
posted December 20, 1999
Five year old little boys should not be floating in the ocean clinging
to a half inflated inner tube, instead they should be playing baseball,
eating ice cream and watching Pokeman. However, Elian Gonzalez was on
a mission with 12 other people who were attempting to escape Castro's
Cuba. Their extraordinary effort to find refuge in the United States resulted
in the deaths of 9 of their members including little Elian's mother.
Elian was lucky.
Even so, this little boy has become a political pawn of Fidel Castro's
communist regime, and he is now a charter member of a long list of children
and adults who have successfully fled the oppression of the aging, cretinous,
dictator.
Castro's propaganda machine was moving at full speed after Elian was
rescued, starting with the declaration, that his mother kidnapped the
boy. A relative of Elian's did confirm that the father wanted the boy
back. As to the charge of kidnapping - that was a word chosen by the Cuban
Foreign Ministry. Moreover, in their feigned attempt to appear concerned,
the Cuban government alerted the U.S. Coast Guard about the boat on the
morning of November 22, and said that they tried to persuade them to turn
back by "pointing out the danger of excess weight and the bad weather."
However, a small motor boat full of dissidents being warned about the
seaworthiness of their vessel from Cuban border guards is likely to go
unheeded. They feared less the 90 miles of water stretching out before
them than the oppression of their homeland.
Of course this is not the first time fleeing Cubans have lost their lives
trying to extricate themselves from the tyranny of Castro. Consider the
terrible demise of over 40 Cuban men, women and children in July 1994.
They too were on their way from Cuba to the United States on the tugboat
"13 de Marzo" when under direct order from Castro these refugees
were murdered by the border guards. Their only crime was trying to flee
the oppression of the hand that ordered their fateful end.
The added insult to the memory of Elian's mother was the Cuban Foreign
Ministry's ridiculous declaration that, "The entire responsibility
for these new and painful deaths falls on the government of the United
States because of the senseless way that illegal immigration is promoted,
stimulated and rewarded from that country." This is yet another example
of the typical blame shifting by communists in their propaganda war to
discredit the United States.
Moreover the much-ballyhooed migratory agreement between Cuba and the
U.S. was supposed to stop illegal immigration. The U.S. was, according
to the agreement, to return all illegals to Cuba. However, according to
Agustin Blazquez, a documentary producer and director of the series of
documentaries entitled Covering Cuba, the migratory agreement is essentially
a "profit making machine at the expense of Cuban suffering."
For instance, Cubans who are disenchanted with communism do not just
wake up one day and say, "let's go to America". They, in all
probability cannot afford Castro's extortion policies to legitimately
exit the country for good. So for those Cubans who want to come to America
via the so-called "legitimate" method must first obtain a U.S.
visa, and then there is the sticky matter of gaining an exit permit. It
is only with the imprimatur of the communist government that a Cuban citizen
can leave the country.
Blazquez explains "as of last July the price Cuba demands for the
exit permit to leave Cuba for good is $600.00US per person." Of course,
if you only want visit the charge is $150.00US a person. The pesos in
Castro's Cuba are worthless pieces of paper so all of the fees must be
paid in US dollars that come from "the relatives abroad." But
it doesn't end there: passports are $50.00US, medical check-ups $400.00US,
airport use $20.00US plus the airfare. So little Elian's mother would
have had to cough up nearly $2,000US to make a "legitimate"
move to America. Obviously she could not come up with money.
In the touchy, feely world of the Clinton administration children are
only important if they have been gunned down in public schools. It is
only then that President Clinton seems to get his proverbial nose out
of joint when it comes to justice. The children of Cuba however are mere
incidentals in this administration's tolerance of communists. Dictators
like Castro have exerted more pain, suffering, and cold-blooded murders
on families (that includes children) than any gun toting malcontent roaming
through a public school.
A senior member of the Democratic Party, Senator Christopher Dodd, echoes
the soft glove approach toward the regime in Cuba. Dodd was the keynote
speaker during the 17th Annual Journalist and Editors Workshop on Latin
America. He opined that "The time has come to lift the trade sanctions
in Cuba" calling them "ineffective, counterproductive, inhumane
and a failure." Clearly Dodd suffers from history deprivation syndrome.
The truth is the European community's response to the dictatorships in
Portugal, Spain and Greece during the 1960's and 1970's are first-rate
examples of sanctions that worked over the long haul. For all practical
purposes, the doors of the European Union, or as it was then called, the
European Community, were closed to these countries until they became democracies.
There was no outcry and no legislation to reduce the pressure on these
dictators saying as Senator Dodd did that sanctions are "ineffective,
counterproductive, inhumane and a failure".
Instead, the sanctions against Oliveria Salaza's regime in Portugal lasted
50 years and sanctions against Franco's regime in Spain lasted 40 years.
All the while the international community was waging a blockade that was
described by Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart (R-FL) as "decisive
in the political openings and democratic transitions that took place in
those countries that had long been oppressed by dictatorships."
Moreover there is the hellish matter of drug trafficking. Cuba has become
the prime route for Columbian heroin and cocaine coming into the U.S.
according to a 1999 State Department report. Then there is the problem
of the President's dysfunctional memory to bring to justice Fidel Castro
for murdering three U.S. citizens and a U.S. resident in the Florida Straits
on February 24, 1996 by Cuban MIG fighter pilots. President Clinton vowed
to the mothers of these victims not to rest until those responsible for
the murders were brought to justice. So where is the justice?
There is only one sure way that the Cuban people will enjoy the benefits
of economic, social and political well being. As Balart explains,"So
when we see some asking for an end to the embargo against Castro now...
we have to then ask which of the conditions do the Cuban people do not
deserve? Do they not deserve the liberation of all political prisoners,
the legalization of political parties, the press, labor unions, or do
they not deserve free elections?"
This means, of course, that for the above conditions to exist either
Castro dies in office (hopefully soon), or he has an epiphany (don't hold
your breathe) or there is a coup. History confirms that countries who
continue to feed a dictatorship, either by trade or some other acquiescence
there is no transition to democracy.
The bottom line is that Castro's regime wants little Elian back. So we
have to ask - is it good for Elian? Is Fidel Castro's Cuba good for the
children? Absolutely not. Freedom is what Mrs. Gonzales wanted for her
son and hopefully Elian will enjoy all the benefits and privileges that
America has to offer.
Ultimately freedom was his mother's wish. 
Joyce Mucci has been published in the Kansas City Star, MetroVoice
and in e-zines such as The New Australian, EtherZone and Rightgrrl where
she is an Advisory Board Member.
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