The international community
was mildly startled by the announcement of a change in the Communist government
of Cuba last month when Miguel Diaz-Canel was named to succeed President Raul
Castro. Communist governments are traditionally not strict about term limits.
The Cuban National Assembly
took a vote on April 19, and Diaz-Canel emerged as the first leader to preside
over Cuba in 59 years outside the Castro family. Raul Castro has stepped down
after two five-year terms, having succeeded his late brother Fidel, the leader
of the 1959 Cuban Revolution which overthrew the dictator, Fulgencio Batista.
Fidel Castro had presided over Cuba for decades.
The accession of Diaz-Canel
marks the end of an era in Cuban history. It denotes a definite point at which
revolutionary rhetoric seems to have given way to ‘realpolitik’ and the
struggle against imperialism replaced by the daily economic struggles of
ordinary Cubans in a world that has changed so much from pre-revolutionary
Cuba.
From his antecedent, it is
clear Diaz-Canel was chosen more for his competence than for his revolutionary
zealotry. He was born after the revolution, and his rise in the party echelon
seems dictated by his education and experience.
After graduation in
electronic engineering in 1982, he also served in the Revolutionary Armed
Forces and in 1987, he was chosen for an international mission in Nicaragua as
First Secretary of the Young Communist League. In 1994, he was elevated to head
the Provincial Committee of Villa Clara, the equivalent of a provincial
governor, where he made his mark for competence. He became a member of the
Politburo in 2003, minister of higher education 2009-12; and First
Vice-President in 2013.
Raul Castro retains the
position of the Secretary of the Central Committee, which means that
ideologically, the country would stay the course. But as has been apparent in
the last decade the constant ideological war of attrition with the United
States which began to thaw during the presidency of Barack Obama would
continue, perhaps, at a slower pace, given American Republicans’ rejectionist
attitude to all the fence-mending and confidence-building executed by President
Obama.
President Diaz-Canel may
not forget the many battles waged by the United States, including the Bay of
Pigs Invasion of April 1961, against his country, and Cuba’s stubborn, almost,
heroic resistance. But the world has changed. He should continue to emphasise
those areas in which Cuba has been so successful as in healthcare, where Cuba
is easily considered the best and the most developed in the world. Cuba exports
more medical doctors than any other country and during the Ebola crisis, its
contribution was considered decisive in the containment of the epidemic.
In education, it has no
equal, with 99.5 per cent literacy. The world would expect the new president to
continue where Raul stopped and, maybe, cease being a slave to orthodoxy, and
learn from China, which has proved that communism and the profit motive are not
mutually exclusive.
The Cuban populace cannot
but expect change. The people should not be denied that change. Economic
policies that emphasize “ease of doing business” should be pursued. Cuba has
proved that money is not everything, but many observers lament that given its
competence in many areas, Cuba as a country ought to be much more affluent than
it is now if the communist regime had relented in ideological dogmatism.
Diaz-Canel should take a
second look at human rights practices, and use the opportunity of his accession
to ease fundamental freedoms and liberties, free expression, and where
possible, encourage freedom of religion, freedom of association and generally
end dictatorial tendencies.
Millions of Cubans abroad
may have held grudges against the communist regime, but most of them are
patriotic Cubans who wish to come home and help rebuild and prosper their
homeland. Let the new president be like a new sunshine into Cuba, a new vista
of hope for a new Cuba. He should feel the pulse of the Cuban people and review
the political culture and widen the scope of individual freedoms.

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