Gandrilla Launches His Mandate at MINIT With New Orders / Juan Juan Almeida
Juan Juan Almeida, 24 January 2017 — Hours after the Obama
administration said good-bye to what was the "wet foot/dry foot" policy,
in Cuba the recently named Minister of the Interior, the new man in
charge of guarding the secrets and security of the State, Julio Cesar
Gandrilla Bermejo, orders a braking, a review and punishment of all
those officers who, in complying with the law, commit excesses and/or
abuses in their treatment of the population, of those charged,
imprisoned, and even those the government calls "members of little
counter-revolutionary groups."
The surprising directive not only comes within the framework of
normalizations of relations between the United States and Cuba, and also
appears at exactly the time when the uncertainty of many Cubans
was triggered when, out of the blue, they closed the valve and reduced
the escapes.
The news of the "wet foot/dry foot" repeal had barely been announced,
intended to stop the exodus of Cubans to the United States, but
the pressure within the island didn't wait. This opportune measure, or
opportunistic reaction, aims to take advantage of the change to protect
the system and national security, silence those who attack the
government showing the constant violations of individual justice, and
avoiding at all costs popular discontent.
Although today everything appears to be in Gandrilla's favor, some
turbulence of opinion arose among the officers who mocked the
vice-admiral saying that he is the only sailor who doesn't know how to
swim, and that his vertiginous ascent is due to a personal relationship
with general Raul Castro, who — after testing his trustworthiness as a
partner in marathon domino tournaments, and evaluating his active
participation in important hunts and risky fishing expeditions — first
appointed him chief of the Department of Personal Security (DSP) of the
Revolutionary Armed Forces (FAR) (which should not be confused with the
group of the same name in the Ministry of the Interior), and then made
him Chief of Military Counterintelligence (CIM), and later first vice
minister of the Ministry of the Interior and ultimately the Minister,
taking the same route as his predecessor, the deceased general Carlos
Fernandez Gondin.
Can the new minister enforce the new provision?
Julio César Gandarilla is a "cadre" of Raul's. He lives with a certain
modesty, along with his children (one a cardiologist and the other in
the military) at number 44 on La Torre Street in the capital district of
Nuevo Vedado, almost directly across from the building occupied for
years by the Castro Espín clan.
He is not known for excesses, he is a solitary man, suspicious, slow to
laugh and a good eater. It is opportune to know that when he was chief
of the CIM he came on the scene because of his critical interest in
reforming the methods that have created overflowing prisons in Cuba,
with a total absence of social rehabilitation for the prisoners.
Personally, I don't think he has the power to stop the repression, like
many, and with great care he may be able to control the excesses
committed by hundreds of repressors.
He has a great deal of experience in pursuing soldiers, comes from CIM
with a doctorate in Internal Control; but the Ministry of the Interior
is not the Revolutionary Armed Forces, it is one of those territories
where it is not easy to impose new norms.
Source: Gandrilla Launches His Mandate at MINIT With New Orders / Juan
Juan Almeida – Translating Cuba -
http://translatingcuba.com/gandrilla-launches-his-mandate-at-minit-with-new-orders-juan-juan-almeida/
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