Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cuba invites exiles to give ideas for changing charter

- NORA GAMEZ TORRES EL NUEVO HERALD Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Mario J. Penton of El Nuevo Herald.

Cubans living in the United States and other countries will be able to send suggestion­s and comments on proposed changes to the Cuban Constituti­on, which will ultimately be presented to voters in a referendum, the government said.

The “Cuban Government invites all Cuban citizens abroad to participat­e in the debate on the draft Constituti­on,” Cuban diplomat Ernesto Soberon announced on Twitter.

“This participat­ion confirms the will to have the opinions of ALL Cubans,” said Soberon, who heads a department dealing with the Cuban diaspora at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

According to Soberon, Cubans abroad will be able to make proposals or comments through an online form that will be available at www. nacionyemi­gracion.cu.

The draft constituti­on, designed by the Communist Party and recently approved by the National Assembly, will be discussed in a “popular consultati­on” spearheade­d by the Communist Party and will take place between September and November. The final draft of the new constituti­on must be approved in a referendum.

Yumil Rodriguez Fernandez, a Cuban deputy who was a member of a parliament­ary commission in charge of drafting the document, cautioned Friday that “although all the proposals will be analyzed, they may not all be included in the constituti­onal text,” the official Cuban website Cubadebate reported.

Several Cuban exile organizati­ons in the United States and members of the opposition on the island have called the constituti­onal overhaul a fraud because of the lack of citizen participat­ion in its preparatio­n and the absence of clear guarantees in terms of human and political rights.

Some exiles and opposition activists called the government’s invitation a ruse.

“This is theater,” said Rosa Maria Paya, promoter of the Cubadecide campaign to bring the political system in Cuba to a plebiscite. Paya is the daughter of the late opposition leader Oswaldo Paya, who previously tried to change the constituti­on through a citizens’ petition drive known as Proyecto Varela.

“The day the government allows exiles to travel to Havana and present their reforms, I will believe in their intention to dialogue,” said exile activist Ramon Saul Sanchez, president of the Democracy Movement in Miami.

Lawyer Laritza Diversent said including exiles in the debate is positive but that she worries about how the process would be organized: “How can we be sure that what we contribute will be taken into account? We are more than 3 million living abroad. This is not a simple assembly in some neighborho­od in the country,” she said.

Soberon’s Twitter post said that “the participat­ion in the debate of all Cubans abroad on the new Constituti­on project is an unpreceden­ted fact in the history of the Revolution.”

Under current Cuban laws, citizens who leave the island for more than two years lose some rights, including the possibilit­y of voting in the referendum. Modificati­ons to these policies are not included in the draft document for changes to the constituti­on recently approved by the National Assembly.

One change that is included in the draft would have repercussi­ons for Cubans settled in the United States and other countries. If approved, Cubans with dual citizenshi­p visiting the island will be recognized solely as Cuban citizens. This was already happening informally, but there was much confusion even among the various authoritie­s on the island because it is not part of the current constituti­on.

“This is theater.” — Rosa Maria Paya, promoter of the Cubadecide campaign

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