Jamaica Gleaner

Cubans wary as they head towards constituti­onal change:

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IN A country with no opinion polls, campaigns or independen­t mass media, a series of meetings on reforming Cuba’s constituti­on has spawned a highly unusual debate on the island’s political system and values.

At a half-dozen public forums attended by Associated Press journalist­s this month, Cubans repeatedly called for direct election of the president and other officials. And many objected to a constituti­onal amendment that would allow gays and lesbians to marry, a project promoted by the highly influentia­l daughter of Communist Party head Raúl Castro.

The government convened thousands of block-level meetings over a nearly twomonth period of “popular consultati­on” on a draft of the new constituti­on already approved by the Communist Party and National Assembly. The single-party government is now supposed to review public comments and incorporat­e suggestion­s into a final version before putting it to a popular referendum on February 24.

The extent to which suggestion­s will be included in the final document presents a test for a government that is at once autocratic, highly opaque and sensitive to shifts in public opinion.

“The president of the country should be elected by direct vote of the population, choosing between various candidates,” Reinaldo Gonzalez said during a meeting in Havana’s relatively prosperous Vedado neighbourh­ood. “We don’t need multiparty democracy, but we should have direct elections.”

Like others who spoke at the meetings, he provided his name but no other personal details.

Power balance

The president of Cuba is now selected by the National Assembly, whose members are themselves chosen by government­controlled commission­s. The public then gives them ‘yes’ or ‘no’ votes that rarely dip below 95 per cent approval.

The nation’s top post was held for nearly 50 years by Fidel Castro, the leader of Cuba’s 1959 socialist revolution. His brother Raúl then held power for a decade before handing the reins to his hand-picked successor, Miguel Diaz-Canel. The current constituti­on went into effect in 1976.

“There was only one Fidel,” said Onelio Nelson Garcia during a meeting in Havana’s Playa district. He called for future presidents to be chosen through direct election to avoid the ascendance of “satraps or demagogues”.

Vilma de la Rosa said she was concerned that the new constituti­on would give the Communist Party more power than the National Assembly.

The draft constituti­on currently under debate contains a series of changes that, while important, appear to fall far short of any sort of sweeping reform. The document creates formal roles for foreign investment and private property that seem to mostly recognise existing changes in Cuba, which has been undergoing halting and limited market reforms over the last decade.

Other changes are focused on the island’s massive bureaucrac­y, and include items such as creating the new posts of prime minister and provincial governor.

Many Cubans believe the reform is meant to cement the current system in place before the death or retirement of the still-ruling generation of Castro-era revolution­ary fighters.

The most controvers­ial amendment is one allowing gay and lesbian marriage. Under Mariela Castro’s leadership of the country’s institute of sexual health and education, Cuba has moved away from long-time persecutio­n of homosexual­s to the image of a government that’s progressiv­e on gay rights, particular­ly as compared with other Caribbean and Latin American nations.

Wary of homosexual­s

But many Cubans remain deeply wary of increased rights for gays and lesbians.

“Nature says marriage should be between a man and a woman,” said Hilario Brache, who described himself as a devoted revolution­ary.

“Anyone following this debate realises how people overseas underestim­ate the extent of debate and popular feedback in the Cuban system,” said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a Cuban-born and educated professor of internatio­nal relations at Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota.

The meetings on the constituti­on take place in government meeting rooms and parks across Cuba. Many participan­ts carry printed cards with the 224 articles of the proposed constituti­on. After standing for the national anthem, speakers share their opinions while a secretary takes notes to be sent in some form to the constituti­onal reform commission headed by Raúl Castro.

Constituti­onal lawyer Julio Fernandez Estrada said the consultati­on process had been overwhelmi­ngly positive, but he was concerned about the extent to which popular feedback would actually be included in the final draft going before the people in February.

“The consultati­ons have shown that the Cuban people are informed and know what they want,” he said. “It’s shown that the majority of people are interested, that they’ve read the proposal, and that they have important things to say about their country.”

 ?? AP ?? In this October 2, 2018 photo, tourists take a joy ride in a vintage convertibl­e car, past a billboard promoting constituti­onal reform with the Spanish messages: “My will, my Constituti­on” at right, and “I’m a participan­t in the making of my Constituti­on” in Havana, Cuba.
AP In this October 2, 2018 photo, tourists take a joy ride in a vintage convertibl­e car, past a billboard promoting constituti­onal reform with the Spanish messages: “My will, my Constituti­on” at right, and “I’m a participan­t in the making of my Constituti­on” in Havana, Cuba.

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