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NEWS



EDITORIAL: The last dictator: OUR OPINION: DIFFERENT CASTRO, SAME POLICE STATE IN CUBA


The Miami Herald

McClatchy-Tribune Business News

3 November 2006

The Miami Herald (MCT)

Nov. 3--The region's democratic governments would be remiss not to press for a transition and human rights in Cuba at the Ibero-American Summit that starts today in Uruguay.

After all, it was at the 1996 summit in Chile that Fidel Castro first signed the declaration committing to "democracy, the rule of law and political pluralism." At the 1999 summit in Havana, a parade of presidents supported Cuban dissidents. King Juan Carlos of Spain offered a toast squarely aimed at Cuba's dictator: "Only with an authentic democracy, the complete guarantee of liberties and the scrupulous respect for human rights for all, will our people meet successfully the challenges of the 21st Century," the king said.

Yet in 47 years, even as the region's many other dictators disappeared, Castro has spurned every effort to bring universally established freedoms to Cuba. Although his brother Raul Castro is running the show now, the repression of dissidents and abuses of ordinary Cubans continue and possibly are worse than ever.

The Cuban regime, for example, ignores this week's recommendation by The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights that it compensate the families of three men summarily executed and that it free the 75 dissidents jailed in a 2003 crackdown. The dissidents were sentenced to 20-plus-year terms for merely criticizing their government. The three men were tried, denied appeal and killed by firing squad -- all in nine days.

With the end of Fidel Castro's rule close at hand, now is the time to promote a democratic transition in Cuba. It is incumbent on Ibero-American countries that aspire to be regional leaders, such as Brazil, Mexico and Argentina, to take the lead. The region's last remaining dictator is a blemish on the entire region.




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