Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Cuba’s constituti­on set to be modernised

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HAVANA : Cuba has begun a rare public discussion to overhaul its Cold War-era constituti­on, a process the government is calling participat­ory democracy at its best and opponents are branding a fraud.

Cuba’s National Assembly approved a draft of changes to the 1976 constituti­on last month, including amendments that would pave the way for recognitio­n of private small businesses and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r rights.

The Communist Party-proposed overhaul will be discussed in 35,000 workplaces and community meetings across the Caribbean island scheduled to stretch into November. Once the debate is concluded, the legislatur­e will approve a new draft and submit it to a nationwide vote in February.

While state media have praised the participat­ory and democratic nature of the consultati­ons, dissidents say the meetings will simply rubberstam­p the changes proposed by party leadership. With much fanfare in the state-run media, more than a million copies of the proposals have been distribute­d and they are also available online.

At a state-run health clinic in the capital Havana, a union leader presented the proposed changes point by point to some 50 employees. While a few people asked for clarificat­ions on individual amendments, no one raised any challenges to them.

“We Cubans are going to ratify everything that has already been done, even if there are alternativ­e proposals,” said Alina Morada, head of nursing for the municipali­ty of Central Havana.

The draft omits a clause in the current constituti­on that enshrines the aim of building a “communist society” in Cuba.

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