Monday, January 9, 2017

Time Takes Another Life In Cuban Politics

Time Takes Another Life In Cuban Politics / 14ymedio

14ymedio, Havana, 8 January 2017 — Faithful, hard-line and knowledgeable
of the ultimate secrets of dissidents and ministers, Carlos Fernandez
Gondín made his mark on the Ministry of Interior (MININT), the most
feared Cuban institution. But shortly after taking over the portfolio in
2015, life played a bad trick on him and he had a stroke, and this
Saturday he became the most recently deceased of a dying gerontocracy.

His death, at age 78, came as no surprise to anyone. The official note
says he died "because of complications of a chronic illness," and on
June 6, at the celebration of the creation of the Ministry of the
Interior, he did not appear on the cameras of national television,
something that fanned the rumors about his state of health.

The powerful ministry he led controls the police, immigration and
aliens, prisons and the omnipresent State Security, among other
departments. Gondín arrived at the top of the institution thanks also to
the perfect fidelity he always showed towards Raul Castro, under whose
orders he fought in the Second Eastern Front in the years of the fight
against Batista.

Gondín made his career in the Cuban army, graduating from the Matanzas
School of War and was later selected to study at the Soviet Union's
Frunze Academy. He participated in the military adventures in Angola and
Ethiopia, reaching the position of second in command of Cuban troops in
Angola.

From 1980 he sat on the Central Committee, the highest organ of the
Communist Party of Cuba which decides the number of members of the
Politburo, the maximum circle of power in the nation. He was also an
elected member of Parliament as of the seventh legislature.

In 1989, MININT's leadership was purged and Fidel Castro named Abelardo
Colome Ibarra, known as Furry, as interior minister while Gondín became
the first deputy minister. Both had worked together since in 1978 when
Gondín was named to head the Counterintelligence Directorate of the
Armed Forces

"He was a man of the Armed Forces who came to MININT at a time when it
was purged of its more open and reformist elements," political scientist
and historian Armando Cuban Chaguaceda told 14ymedio from Mexico.

According to the academician, there has always been a rivalry between
the Ministry of the Interior and the Revolutionary Armed Forces that
climaxed with the conviction of General Arnaldo Ochoa and 13 others
accused of getting rich through drug trafficking operations in 1989.

"The MININT apparatus has more sophisticated people than the
military. There are many people dedicated to analyzing, to thinking,
especially those who are in contact with the outside," explains
Chaguaceda. He believes that Gondín's death will not affect the current
policy on the island. "Until proven otherwise it is more of the same,"
he says.

Gondín was also known for being a meticulous man, who knew how to stay
in the shadows. He was considered the eminence grise after the
political repression during the mandate of Furry. Several dissidents
point to the recently deceased military man as the main organizer of the
arrests, house arrests and strict surveillance against opponents,
especially against the Ladies in White.

However, shortly after assuming the position of minister, Gondin
suffered a stroke that left him unable to perform his duties. Since then
and to date, Cuba's most powerful ministry has been under the command of
Vice Admiral Julio Cesar Gandarilla Bermejo, first deputy minister of
the Ministry of the Interior who comes from the Ministry of the Armed
Forces Military Counterintelligence arm.

The analyst Julio Aleaga, author of a study about who's who in Cuban
national politics, told 14ymedio that Gondín's time in management was
"very short" and when he was named to the post "it was already known
that he was a sick man." When asked who will fill the vacancy, he points
to Gandarilla Bermejo, who has completed missions in 11 countries,
including Angola, and who is also a septuagenarian.

Aleaga discards the idea that Alejandro Castro Espín, son of the current
ruler, and a man whom many point out as possible replacement, will be
placed at the front of the ministry. "If they were preparing Alejandro
to ascend in the control of the dynasty, he would hold a position at
another level, not in the Ministry of the Interior," he says.

For his part, Juan Antonio Blanco, executive director of the Cuban-based
Foundation for Human Rights in Cuba, is skeptical about the arrival of a
reformist era with the death of Gondín.

"It is more likely to be related to facilitating the ascent of the
grandson, Raul Guillermo Rodríguez Castro and the son, Alejandro Castro
Espín, within MININT and the elite of power," he says.

For Blanco, "What is coming is the definitive consolidation of Castro's
succession before 2018," the year in which the second term of Raul
Castro ends.

For his part, Chaguaceda says that it is difficult to establish a
parallelism between the longevity of Cuban rulers and that of the
elderly secretaries of the Communist Party in the Kremlin during the
time of the Soviet Union. By 1982, a successive chain of deaths had
renewed Soviet rule and allowed a younger generation to take power and
implement change. The fundamental difference would be that in the Soviet
case the rulers were part of the nomenklatura and not the creators of
the system itself, as is the case in the Cuba.

"In Cuba the succession is given, in the life of the founder and with a
decade of development, while in the USSR, Brezhnev, Andropov and
Chernenko died in quick succession, which shook the ossified bureaucracy
of the politburo," the expert explains.

Many of the members of the Politburo are in the seventh decade of their
lives. In the coming months obituaries and new appointments could appear
very frequently in the Cuban press.

Source: Time Takes Another Life In Cuban Politics / 14ymedio –
Translating Cuba -
http://translatingcuba.com/time-takes-another-life-in-cuban-politics-14ymedio/

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