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Raul Castro stirs up Cuban leadership

Posted: Tuesday, March 03, 2009 11:27 AM
Filed Under:

HAVANA – Cuba’s President Raul Castro sure knows how to get the nation to sit up and listen.

While most people were at school or work and far away from their TV sets on Monday, a news announcer read a typed sheet of paper announcing the reshuffling of 10 Cabinet positions and the collapse of four key ministries into two. But by the end of the day, the shake-up was all people were talking about.

The Cuban public seemed most surprised by the removal of two men closely aligned with Raul’s predecessor, Fidel Castro, and pegged as the frontrunners of the next generation of leaders.

Image: Felipe Perez Roque, Raul Castro
Javier Galeano / AP File
President Raul Castro, right, stands with then-Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque during a session of the National Assembly of Popular Power in Havana on June 29, 2007.  

Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque was replaced by his own deputy, Bruno Rodriguez. And Dr. Carlos Lage lost his job as Cabinet Secretary to Brig. Gen. Jose Amado Ricardo Guerra, but Lage remains one of the Council of State’s vice presidents.

Both men are popular leaders, especially with the island’s younger generations.

Possible successors no more
Prior to being named foreign minister, Perez Roque, 43, was Fidel Castro’s chief of staff  – he was just fresh out of engineering college when he landed that job. At his appointment in 1999, he became the youngest member of the Cabinet and the only one born after the 1959 Cuban Revolution.

The nation watched him grow from a shy figure in Fidel’s shadow into a self-assured politician who adroitly managed Cuba’s complex foreign relations with more than 140 countries. For the moment, Perez Roque remains a senior member of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party.

Lage, 57, is a pediatrician by training who has been active in Communist Party politics since his student days. He rose to prominence during the turbulent years that followed the fall of the Soviet Union, which had been the island’s financial lifeline. Lage become known as Cuba’s economic czar, credited with designing the financial reforms that allowed the island to survive the crisis that began in the early nineties.

Lage remains an extremely popular figure here. People remember him as the young politician who, like millions of workers, rode a Chinese bicycle to the office when the country had no cash to import oil. He was often spotted jogging along Havana’s public streets without bodyguards or fancy running shoes. In the summer of 2006 when Fidel Castro required surgery, Lage was one of the select group given provisional powers to rule in Fidel’s absence. He has widely been considered one of the successors to the Castro brothers’ rule.

Over the past year as Raul steered Cuba along his own course, Lage and others in Fidel's inner circle seemed to have lost influcence. Today there is no clear successor to 77-year-old Raul, except for his hand-picked vice president, Jose Ramon Machado Ventura, who is actually a year older than the younger Castro brother.

In addition to the shuffling of some 10 Cabinet positions, Raul also took a stab at reducing the socialist government’s enormous bureaucracy.

Under Monday’s measures, the food and fishing ministries collapsed into one entity, as did the ministries of foreign trade and foreign cooperation. As with any reduction in public spending, these moves are expected to leave hundreds of state workers without jobs.

Still dominated by ‘historic generation’
Monday’s announcements could well add to grievances from younger people who complain that their generation holds little influence and power in today’s Cuba. Kids routinely grumble that the island is run and dominated by what’s known here as the "historic generation," the men who fought with Fidel Castro and seized power half a century ago.

Jesus Montoya, 23, said he heard the announcement in a packed university commons room. "It did not go over well. Some kids even started booing."

Personally, Montoya says he is reserving judgment since he backs any and all actions to reduce the government's size. "I hope this will naturally lead to a larger private sector. People need to stop relying on the state and the state needs to allow people to rely on their own abilities to make a living."

He wants Raul to allow Cubans to open up their own businesses. That however does not seem to be a priority for Raul’s administration, although he has allowed more private taxis on Havana’s streets. Instead, he seems focused on trying to tackle the colossal issue of government waste.

‘A matter of survival’

Since officially taking office on Feb. 24, 2008, Raul has hammered away at the idea of Cuba needing to save money and resources by becoming more efficient. "It’s a matter of survival," he has said on more than one occasion.

Over the past year in office, Raul has spearheaded drives to reform state-run companies, open up the agricultural sector and to downsize government. Under his mandate, the younger Castro has even supported economic incentives, almost a treasonous idea to the elder Fidel Castro who organized Cuban society around the ideas of equality and egalitarianism.

With the Cuban state controlling over 90 percent of the economy, Raul’s push for economic reform has had an across-the-board effect.

His government has adopted modern management and accounting practices with local managers being granted more day-to-day decision-making power.

Both state and private farmers can now legally charge higher prices for their products after meeting state quotas. And, in some industries, Cuba has abolished nationally set wage ceilings so that salaries are tied to both an individual's performance and that of the collective.

Raul also has allowed Cubans to buy computers, own mobile telephones, rent cars and spend nights in hotels previously only accessible to foreigners. While most cannot afford such luxuries on their low wages, people generally applauded the end to the discriminatory practices in the Cuban market.

'Two plus two always makes four not five'
But Raul was forced to curtail his economic and social reform drive after three devastating hurricanes swept the island last season and caused some $10 billion in damages, equal to 10 percent of Cuba’s Gross Domestic Product.

During the 2008 closing session of parliament, Raul revealed that recovery could easily take up to six years but that "this did not mean reforms have been shelved."

At that meeting he turned the spotlight on government deficiencies, calling the lack of accountability and waste in government spending one of the "fundamental problems" of Cuba’s socialist system. He revealed plans to set up a watchdog agency on government spending, eliminate some $60 million a year in state-run company bonuses and cut in half all travel perks for Communist Party and business leaders while promising to raise wages and create jobs.

"We have to eliminate improper gratuities and bloated subsidies, otherwise the bills won't add up. Two plus two always makes four not five," Raul said.

Updated at 2:30 p.m.: Just 24 hours after the Cuban Cabinet shake-up, convalescing Fidel Castro wrote a column supporting the purge of the two younger leaders.

In his blog published on CubaDebate.cu, Castro revealed that he was consulted beforehand on the decision and justified it by charging that Perez Roque and Lage were seduced by the "honey of power."

Castro also seemed to be sending a message to Washington not to look for alternatives to the current regime. "The external enemy was full of illusions for them," wrote Castro, referring to the United States as the enemy and Perez Roque and Lage as "them."

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There are hundreds of thousands in this country who are poor, without jobs, housing or healthcare. The Cubans who came here after receiving a excellent professional educations can always sit around and pontificate about how bad "Castro's Cuba" is. What about the BILLIONS of dollars stolen from hard working Americans under the sunny smiles of capitalism? I love this, MY country, but I can't stand her hypocrisy. How free are you when there is always someone deciding that you aren't as important as the rich guys and regulation are passed to make sure that the economic advantage stays on the same side of the tracks?

How can we trade with the Saudis, Chinese and Russia for crying out loud and have such a hard line against trade with little bitty Cuba? It reads all too easily as the old guard's ego. Cuba could have been a friend to the US long ago. On a respectful basis, we could have suggested reforms as trade partners. That would have been too much like respect for brown people. Oops! I thought you knew.
I feel all the people expressing their thoughts have done so with intentions of being heard. What some have forgotten is that nothing in life is FREE! If you want a better life or opportunity you MUST do whatever it takes, for as long as it takes to get it!
YOU want FREEDOM, it's NOT FREE! YOU HAVE TO EARN IT!
A number of generations now, younger folks now grown into adulthood in America have become accustomed to asking and getting what they want from their parents or Grandparents "without" having to do anything for what they asked for. In other cases they have taken or stolen to get what they wanted or want. Cuba was taken over by the Castros and their followers who cared enough to sacrifice, even their lives, to get a
change of government. They took over everything that permitted and allowed capitalism to flourish where a
man or woman could own a business, have employees, own a home, a car, a boat, a farm, a gas station and offer opportunity to anyone desiring to work to make a living. I didn't say the wages were great but was Cuban uprising or revolution a better alternative to
the Cuba of today? You be the judge. Is this what we citizens now demand here in America today? Life is not fair and who says that you should work for the good of those that won't and you should share your money with those on welfare who don't work? It soon will be this way, by law, if you're paying attention to new legislation being passed in Congress. Cuba is
in the predicament it's in because most of its people did nothing against Batistta and joined the ideas of a Socialist Cummunist "everything free" propagada. Do
NOt fall for this like in America today. There'll be consequences like in Cuba.. Can you imagine America being like Cuba 100 years from now? Think about IT!!
We went to war against Japan - they killed 1,000's of our young men - we helped them become one of the World's greatest economies. We went to war against Germany - they killed 1,000' of our young men - we helped them become one of the World's greatest economies. Ok, ok, I get it they became democracies.

We went to war against Vietnam - we've helped it become one of the worlds strongest economies. It's a Communist repressive Country. We beg China to lend us Billions of dollars, spend billions there during the Olympics - It's a communist repressive country.

Will someone please explain to me why we don't recognize Cuba and at least began to talk to them? Heck, if Cuba wants to become a World economic power then it should declare war on the U.S. - loose -  and let us rebuild them.

I just don't understand all this hate that is spewed over something that should be resolved.

this sounds similar to whats happening in this country today.particualarly the comment on governmental wasteful spending by raul, and the comment by the student saying people need to stop relying on the government and promotes a bigger private sector.
I pray the current administration sits down and conducts consructive dialogue with Cuba. Cuba needs to join the rest of the "Americas". The economical blockade has to end soon. At least, we should allow Cuba to start off as a "Commonwealth", like the island of Puerto Rico.
The U.S has complete fault in the way Cuba became communist. Yes, it would have still became a communist state but not the one Fidel turned into due to U.S indirect invasion, economic policies, and constantly pointing there finger that Cuba isnt as good as the U.S. I am acutally impressed actually and happy that Cuba is the way it is, it has been defiant in operating the way the U.S does. Why is it that the U.S thinks all countries should be like them. Its citizens are blind to see the true realities of its policies and acts around the world that have caused the deaths of hundreds of thousand if not millions of innocent civilians life for its own self-intereted and selfish ideolgy. Look at todays situation. The U.S has complete fault of the world financial markets to collapse and as a result of that millions are suffering and will cause even more deaths due to lack of funds to support families in third world ountries and so forth. Look at the big picture people. And all those who call themselves Cubans that live in the U.S living these comfortable lives will never trade it to live in Cuba even if the regime completely changes, most have lost there cultural connection to there own country. Who is it to say and assume that all Cubans want to leave the island because they are "suffering." Your trying to compare lifestyles of two very distinct countries with different cultural values. Even the most poorest countries have the highest "Happiness" ratings, why? becasue there outlook on life isnt based on wealth, luxuries to define there social status.
Well people this is why this planet of us is so messed up or even worse than the situation in Cuba. We all have different overview of it and even we believe that our idea in how to fix Cuba is the best...some of you think than cubans must figth for a change and maybe that is best idea and others think diplomacy and better relations with U.S should fix the situation who knows...but because power, greed, corruption and injustice will always run trough out some people's veins in charge on every corner of this planet the human being will suffer missery,death, hunger, injustice and every other bad thing that could happen to a person,  and when all that is happening in Cuba there is many places with the same situation and no one is talking about them. I am a Cuban American tired of injustice happening all over the world but i can't fight all of them nor i want to die for it. Revolutions are a thing of the past, they called it now terrorist group trying to overthrow the current goverment. If Cubans start arming themselves and start killing people in the goverment with bombs or machines guns and they happen to kill an innocent bystanders or blow in pieces by mistake a bus full of children that were in the same exact place Raul and his entorage were driving by,  they would call them terrorist not heroes. And if they pacefully march into Revolution Square to have a demostration those who knows the regime know that would end with a visit to the hospital or the morgue or even worse the jails in Cuba (i would personally prefer the morgue..the hospitals would kill you after all when a deadly bacteria make it his home on you...the jail ..well if you have seen the hospitals..what do you expect?)...So what is the best solution ?...I am not a religious person at all but i said let god and time fix this puzzle. 20 years from now (hoping that Fidel is dead and Raul as well) who knows what fresh blood of new generation would bring. I still have family there and don't want them to die...as i don't want more americans diying in a country so far and so deep in their traditions and confusing religious that not even the soldiers understand why the figthing. By the way we got Sadam now let the Iraqui people fix themselves like some of you think Cubans should.
As a Cuban-American, I find it interesting that there are people who claim that castro (lower case on purpose)is more "moral" and has never invaded an occupied country under false pretenses. ernesto is a hero? What are you people smoking? castro lied to his own people and for 50 years he has continued to lie to the Cuban people....and ernesto? He was a murderer and assasin, period. Cuban's have great healthcare?...that's a bunch of BS!...free and great are two very distinct words that in Cuba's case are not related. I agree with a previous comment, if you want to go there, then when you get there, tear up your passport, denounce your citizenship, then come back and tell us how good it is down there. Enjoy!
Let's close our borders and get our affairs in order.  Let this also mean that American aid stops going out.  I wonder what the world would be like then?  How about if the Marshall Plan never existed?  This country isn't perfect, but the generosity of our citizens is unprecedented in the world!
Cuba will not gain freedom from lifiting the trade embargo.  It will gain a mixture of socialism and capitalism. China is a example of this.  China, after years of more open relations, is still Communist.  China still is very repressive.

The Cuban life style has always been a passion of mine. It's unfortunate that, the people are being strangled by such old and outdated political agendas. It should be up to the people. The Revolution wasn't intended to repress and suppress. Victor Hugo said it perfectly: "Nothing is stronger than an idea whose time has come." The Cuban people are full of ideas. You hear it in their music and you see it in the way they dance; you see it when they smile, and you hear the deep sound of joy in their laughter. The Cuban people shouldn't have to always look through a peep-hole at freedom, because freedom has no limits. The person, who invented the bird cage, didn’t know much about birds.
To all those Cuban-Americans who want the change so much why dont you go back to cuba and do what fidel did against an oppressive gov.t, as you should know about your Cuban history its in your blood to revolt as you threw out the spanish and the americans!!! So why dont you do it?

After all if everyone hates Castro so much as you say and they are so oppressed why dont you free them and everyone will follow.

You need to be as committed as Castro to do that and die for your cause but i doubt anyone would do that now, would you?

Lets face it as for all the people who originate from USA here all you care about is another holiday destination to spend your dollars and take in the natural beauty of Cuba. Cuba is for the Cubans and is nothing to do with the Americian or American people so why dont you mind your own business.

As for the USA Gov.t all they want to do is milk Cuba for what its worth as they did before...




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