Otago Daily Times

Cuban public debates new constituti­on

-

HAVANA: Cuba yesterday began a rare public discussion to overhaul its Cold Warera 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 paving the way for recognitio­n of private small businesses and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r rights.

The Communist Partypropo­sed 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 staterun media, more than a million copies of the proposals have been distribute­d and they are also available online.

At a staterun 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, noone 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, where the meeting took place.

The draft omits a clause in the current constituti­on that enshrines the aim of building a ‘‘communist society’’ in Cuba. However, it does not change the ‘‘irrevocabi­lity’’ of the oneparty system and socialist economy.

Alternativ­e systems of government have been dubbed counterrev­olutionary since the late Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution.

But the proposals enshrine a gradual social and economic opening under way since the fall of Cuba’s former benefactor, the Soviet Union.

While there are no reliable opinion polls in Cuba, anecdotal evidence indicates many Cubans accept the gist of the changes.

However, Hildebrand­o Chaviano, a retired lawyer and dissident journalist, said many Cubans were afraid of repression if they spoke out publicly. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS/ ?? Changes coming . . . Cubans attend a public political discussion to revamp the country’s Cold Warera constituti­on in Havana, Cuba yesterday.
PHOTO: REUTERS/ Changes coming . . . Cubans attend a public political discussion to revamp the country’s Cold Warera constituti­on in Havana, Cuba yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand