Friday, December 2, 2011

Cuba’s Citizens Freer Movement

Cuba's Citizens Freer Movement
December 1, 2011
Fernando Ravsberg

HAVANA TIMES, Dic 1 — The recent reform of the law that limited
migration from the provinces to the capital seems a step in the right
direction, though it still doesn't completely respond to the spirit of
the constitution entitling Cubans to live wherever they see fit.

In any case, we have to recognize that it's far more flexible than the
previous law, whose application is said to have led to the deportation
of tens of thousands of citizens [from Havana] back to their places of
origin, mostly in the eastern provinces.

The memories I have of those days are not fond ones. I recall running
from here to there trying to cover stories about the eviction of
"illegal" families. In the outlying Diezmero neighborhood, residents
protested and the police backed off, though not after leaving behind a
kicked-in door, furniture lying out in the rain and children crying.

"They say we're illegal, but we're not illegal in our own country,"
explained distraught community members. I thought they were right,
legally and morally, because those who come from the eastern provinces
are the grandchildren of the men and women who fought most forcefully
against the Batista dictatorship.

It's logical for a government to try to achieve a balance between the
populations of the cities and the countryside, the social consequences
of uncontrolled migration can be seen in any stroll through the favelas
throughout Brazil, the cantegriles in Uruguay or the callampas of Chile.

Still, even granting this need for balance, repression never provides
lasting results. It only attacks the effects, leaving intact the initial
social problems that gave rise to them. The government can "repatriate"
thousands, but they'll return if the living conditions in the provinces
are not improved.

Very few people would even initiate such migratory adventures if they
could find comparable opportunities in their places of origin.

A good example would be the Varadero beach resort; no one wants to
migrate to the capital from there, despite it being a provincial town.

The Right to Travel Abroad

Cubans are also hoping for a new policy with regard to foreign travel,
one with procedures that are more flexible, cheaper and rational. Above
all, people want to see a policy based on rights expressed and codified
in the law rather than the discretionary authority of officials armed
with semi-secret regulations.

It's said that some regulations will disappear, such as the requirement
for a "letter of invitation," through which a foreigner — even if they
are a criminal, as long as they're foreign — must become a type of
guardian of a Cuban who wishes to travel.

Odds have it that we will also see the elimination of the permiso de
salida (exit permit), which currently gives the government the right to
decide whether citizens can travel. In the future, control would be
realized using a computer program, a tool that's more effective than the
endless paperwork presently required.

It's speculated that the majority of Cubans will be issued a passport
that will "enable" them to leave the country at any time, while those in
the military and other very specific groups will be required to go
through the old procedures.

The issue of Cuban professionals will be much debated in the search for
solutions that combine the individual interests of university graduates
with the collective economic needs of the society that provided them
training.

The state doesn't want to lose its professionals after paying for the
costs of their education; but then too, no college degree should become
a life sentence, no matter how strategic the knowledge of a person.

It seems that the most likely option will be to ask medical
professionals — doctors included — to work for a minimum amount of time
in Cuba to compensate the nation for what it has afforded them, after
which time they will be free to come and go like any other citizen.

Another important step being debated is the possibility of minors
traveling abroad temporarily. Up until now, children and adolescents
have only been able to leave Cuba if their parents were permanently
emigrating.

This is a sensitive issue because what's still vivid in the minds of
many Cubans is the memory of "Operation Peter Pan", through which the US
government, the anti-Castro opposition and the Catholic Church airlifted
14,000 children from of the country without their parents.

Travel restrictions in Cuba exist within the context of the 50-year
confrontation with the United States. In fact, Washington continues to
maintain specific policies to encourage the emigration of Cuban doctors
serving in other nations.

It's true that the revolution is not only what its leaders decide it
should be; it's also what its enemies force it to be. Still, it's all
something quite different from trying to convince Cuban citizens that
immigration policy is necessary to prevent air-traffic congestion around
the world.[*]

A Havana Times translation of the Spanish original published by BBC Mundo.

[* – "If the entire world's 6 billion inhabitants could travel wherever
they wanted, air-traffic congestion would be enormous…" replied the
president of the Cuban National Assembly, Ricardo Alarcon, responding to
a question in 2008 concerning the right of Cubans to travel.]

http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=56733

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