CUBA NEWS
November 4, 2004

Castro gouges his people 6n5o60

Palm Beach Post Editorial, November 03, 2004.

Old tyrants don't die soon enough. They just fall, hurt themselves and then inflict more pain on their people.

Fidel Castro broke an arm and leg last month in a much-publicized tumble. He recovered quickly enough to take it out on the Cuban people, announcing a new policy that makes it illegal to use U.S. dollars and requires a 10 percent charge to convert them into pesos. Rising oil prices and tighter U.S. sanctions have worsened Cuba's chronic economic problems. Unable to provide real solutions, Castro turns to retaliatory measures. As always, the people take the real fall.

Cuban-Americans, many of them in Florida, send about $1 billion each year to relatives and friends on the island, making remittances the strongest segment of an economy that has remained in perpetual crisis since Castro took power. The new policy will take money out of the pockets of Cubans and add more hardship to lives that already are hard enough. Castro legalized the dollar a decade ago, and Cubans' buying power rose. Items that once were unattainable - appliances, quality clothing and food, in particular - found their way into households of people who were neither elite nor tied to Castro's political machinery. In real and symbolic , the dollar has meant freedom for many Cubans.

The Bush istration's decision to impose more trade and travel restrictions on Cuba has already depressed standards of living, and the ban on the dollar will make matters worse. At long last, Castro and the U.S. government appear to have found common ground in their determination to deny Cubans a better life. Instead of a progressive approach that would empower the people and prepare them for what comes after Castro, President Bush embraces Cold War tactics. Oppression from the tyrant is expected. But from the U.S. government?


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