Tuesday, November 01, 2016

The 'scarecrow' words Raúl Castro never said

The 'scarecrow' words Raúl Castro never said
JORGE ENRIQUE RODRÍGUEZ | La Habana | 1 de Noviembre de 2016 - 11:08 CET.

Until recently private-sector businesses in Havana hung, like scarecrows
to frighten away menacing birds, signs featuring a phrase attributed to
Raúl Castro, and the general never said a word to dispel this
impression, at least publicly.

The quote was: "Those who decide to demonise, criminalize and prosecute
the self-employed choose a path that, besides being petty, is ludicrous,
as it is untenable. Cuba is counting on them as one of the engines
driving future development, and they have clearly arrived on the urban
scene to stay."

In reality the words were from an article, "The Cityscape and Future
Challenges," by regime journalist Félix Lépez, published in Granma on
September 23, 2011.

"I remember it was a neighbor who told me that the quote was from Raúl,
in a speech. I immediately hung it up in my cafe, in principle to daunt
the ONAT inspectors, who tend to be very rude," said Migdalia.

"But I think those words, no matter who pronounced them, are being
betrayed by the actions now being taken against the self-employed. On
the (television) news on the 19th they said that we were illegally
buying raw materials that the State guaranteed us. That's a lie. The
only thing the State guarantees is a horde of inspectors and
bureaucratic measures that mock phrases like these."

Like many private sector workers, Armando also assumed that the words
had been pronounced by the general, in his speech on 18 December, 2010
at the Palacio de Convenciones.

"As in that speech he also talked about the self-employed ..." he
recalls. "I saw the phrase hanging in a cafe in Vedado, and I asked a
designer to make me a picture. A couple of months ago I got pissed off
and threw it away, because I no longer felt like those words were going
to protect my bakery/candy store," he added.

"They began to harass me, demanding all the paperwork on the appliances,
the refrigerator and the oven. Then they started asking me about where I
bought my flour and lard, as if the State had a place to sell them at
better prices than the TRDs (retail stores)," he explained. "Yes, I feel
that those words, whether he said them or not, and we self-employed, are
being betrayed."

According to Lázaro Raúl, a worker at the recently-closed El Renacer
cafe: "the phrase was not bad, but everything indicates that the police
and inspectors cannot read or interpret."

"A friend of mine gave it to me, assuring me that Raúl had said it, so I
thought it would be a good idea to hang it up as 'protection' for the
business, but no such luck. There is too much bureaucracy and ignorance,
and very little protection for entrepreneurs. I had even hoped that my
case was an isolated one, but now I see that they are against against
all the country's self-employed. It seems that words are not enough, or
that they got old."

Won´t there be reversals?

The words the general did say, at the close of the sixth regular session
of the seventh meeting of the National Assembly of Popular Power,
actually do not contradict those attributed to him by private
entrepreneurs: "If the exercise of self-employment is another
professional alternative (...) it is incumbent upon the Party and the
Government, in the first place, to facilitate their management and not
create stigmas or prejudices towards them, and certainly not to demonise
them, and for this it is essential to modify the negative attitudes
harbored by many of us towards this form of private employment."

In that same speech, Raúl Castro stated that: "The steps we have been
taking and will continue to take towards the expansion and
flexibilization of self-employment are the result of profound
reflections and analysis, and we can guarantee that this time there will
be no going back."

But the forced closures of restaurants like Shangri-La, at 42nd and
21st; Manzana, in Old Havana; and El Sarao, at 17th and E, as well as
the televised warnings and restrictions on bakeries/confectioneries,
bicycle taxis, owners of accommodations for foreigners, and other
private sector activities, "do represent a total reversal of their
policies towards self-employment," says Marianela, who owns a hair salon.

"It would not be worth it to correct it and hang up his actual words,
because in the end they expressed the same thing and the result, as you
can see, is a reversal," she said. "In my case, I never hung up the
phrase, and I'm glad I didn´t. We've always been demonised, and that´s
the Government´s fault. Now many businesses are accused of promoting
drugs and prostitution... If that isn't turning the people against us,
what is?"

Source: The 'scarecrow' words Raúl Castro never said | Diario de Cuba -
http://www.diariodecuba.com/cuba/1477991294_26399.html

No comments: