Wednesday, February 17, 2010

"Venecuba", a single nation

The Americas
Venezuela and Cuba

"Venecuba", a single nation
Hugo Chávez, as he drafts in ever more Cuban aides to shore up his
regime, is fulfilling a longstanding dream of Fidel Castro's
Feb 11th 2010 | CARACAS | From The Economist print edition
AP

IN A small fishing village on the Caribbean coast of Venezuela stands a
plinth. Unveiled by government officials in 2006, it pays homage to the
Cuban guerrillas sent by Fidel Castro in the 1960s to help subvert
Venezuela's then recently restored democracy. Almost entirely bereft of
popular support, the guerrilla campaign flopped. But four decades later,
and after a decade of rule by Hugo Chávez, Cuba's communist regime seems
finally to have achieved its goal of invading oil-rich Venezuela—this
time without firing a shot.

Earlier this month Ramiro Valdés, a veteran revolutionary who ranks
number three in Cuba's ruling hierarchy and was twice its interior
minister, arrived in Caracas, apparently for a long stay. Officially, Mr
Valdés has come to head a commission set up by Mr Chávez to resolve
Venezuela's acute electricity shortage. But he lacks expertise in this
field, and Cuba is famous for 12-hour blackouts. Some members of
Venezuela's opposition reckon that Mr Valdés, whose responsibilities at
home include policing Cubans' access to the internet, has come to help
Mr Chávez step up repression ahead of a legislative election in
September. Others believe he was sent to assess the gravity of the
situation facing the Castro brothers' most important ally (Cuba depends
on Mr Chávez for subsidised oil). He has been seen in meetings with
Venezuelan military commanders.

Although by far the most senior, Mr Valdés is only one among many Cubans
who have been deployed by Mr Chávez under bilateral agreements that took
shape in 2003. As well as thousands of doctors staffing a
community-health programme, they include people who are helping to run
Venezuela's ports, telecommunications, police training, the issuing of
identity documents and the business registry.

In 2005 Venezuela's government gave Cuba a contract to modernise its
identity-card system. Since then, Cuban officials have been spotted in
agencies such as immigration and passport control. A group of Cubans who
recently fled Venezuela told a newspaper in Miami that they had bribed a
Cuban official working in passport control at Caracas airport.

In some ministries, such as health and agriculture, Cuban advisers
appear to wield more power than Venezuelan officials. The health
ministry is often unable to provide statistics—on primary health-care or
epidemiology for instance—because the information is sent back to Havana
instead. Mr Chávez seemed to acknowledge this last year when, by his own
account, he learned that thousands of primary health-care posts had been
shut down only when Mr Castro told him so.

Coffee-growers complain that in meetings with the government it is
Bárbara Castillo, a former Cuban trade minister, who calls the shots. Ms
Castillo, who was formally seconded to Venezuela four years ago, refuses
requests for interviews.

Trade unions, particularly in the oil and construction industries, have
complained of ill-treatment by the Cubans. No unions are allowed on
Cuban-run building sites. In September last year Froilán Barrios of the
Confederation of Venezuelan Workers, which opposes the government, said
that "oil and petrochemicals are completely penetrated by Cuban G2," the
Castros' fearsomely efficient intelligence service. Oil workers planning
a strike said they had been threatened by Cuban officials.

The new national police force and the army have both adopted policies
inspired by Cuba. The chief adviser to the national police-training
academy is a Cuban, and Venezuela's defence doctrine is based on Cuba's
"war of all the people". Foreign officials who watch Venezuela closely
say that Cuban agents occupy key posts in Venezuela's military
intelligence agency, but these claims are impossible to verify.

Mr Chávez portrays Cuban help as socialist solidarity in the struggle
against "the empire", as he calls the United States. When he was
visiting Cuba in 2005 Fidel Castro said publicly to him that their two
countries were "a single nation". "With one flag," added Mr Chávez, to
which Mr Castro replied, "We are Venecubans." These views are not shared
by Venezuelans. In a recent poll 85% of respondents said they did not
want their country to become like Cuba. Perhaps Mr Valdés will include
that in his assessment.

Venezuela and Cuba: "Venecuba", a single nation | The Economist (17
February 2010)
http://www.economist.com/world/americas/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15501911

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