Miami Herald

July 11, 2021, continues to issue a call to action for Cubans on and off the island

- BY ORLANDO GUTIÉRREZ-BORONAT gutierrezb­oronat.com Orlando Gutiérrez-Boronat is the coordinato­r of the Cuban Resistance Assembly in Miami.

On July 11, we commemorat­ed the first anniversar­y of a heroic day of protests that stand out in the history of the struggle for freedom in Cuba.

The myriad commemorat­ive activities carried out in Miami and in Cuban-exile communitie­s around the world saluted the popular resistance, which has continued after that day.

In Cuba, July 11 marked a transforma­tion of the civic struggle for democracy, the leap made from the qualitativ­e to the quantitati­ve. It is evidenced by the wave of signs against the Castro regime that continue to appear throughout the country, signs whose prominence testifies to the silent decision in several neighborho­ods to protect those who paint them; and by the spontaneou­s protests punctuated with cries of “Freedom!” at rock concerts or the University of Camagüey; and by the brave defiance that political prisoners still maintain behind bars.

The people have sought, and will continue to seek, the moments and ways to fight for their dignity.

From Miami, how do we support this internal call to paralyze the Cuban regime?

First, with constant support for political prisoners, their families and activists. With love and perseveran­ce, many organizati­ons in exile are dedicated to this task. We must concentrat­e the political and economic power of exile on interrupti­ng the flow of money from abroad that finances the repression against the Cuban people.

That money comes, embarrassi­ngly, from Western democratic countries, from Canada and the European Union, from Spain, France and Italy. For example, between 2019 and 2022 alone, the Paris Club has provided the communist dictatorsh­ip with more than $200 million in resources. In that same period of time, the Cooperatio­n Agreement with the European Union has provided 63 million euros to this disgracefu­l regime.

These are the resources with which the Castro tyranny operates. These resources are not used to build hospitals or schools, to fix roads or increase workers’ wages, they benefit the Castro family and the military clique that is its instrument. Ultimately these resources finance repression.

Second, the United States must make a determined effort to work with these allied countries to correct this unacceptab­le reality. It is inconceiva­ble and contradict­ory that, while Russia is being sanctioned, resources are being injected into Vladimir Putin’s main ally in the Western Hemisphere.

Third, we must work from now on to clearly outline the steps to be taken in a democratic transition whose main objective is to return sovereignt­y

to the Cuban citizen. A government cannot be sovereign when the people are not. Cuban patriots inside and outside the island already are working on these studies, based on the framework of the Agreement for Democracy, ratified in Miami in 1998 by pro-democracy organizati­ons in Cuba and Miami.

From inside and outside the island, the Cuban nation must consider what

are the specific steps to recover freedom and establish the rule of law.

July 11, 2021, marked the beginning of the insurgency of a people for their freedom. This uprising was not a question of a single day, but of all the days of struggle that are necessary to save Cuba.

 ?? AP ?? Anti-government demonstrat­ors protest high prices for food and food shortages at the Maximo Gomez monument in Havana on July 11, 2021.
AP Anti-government demonstrat­ors protest high prices for food and food shortages at the Maximo Gomez monument in Havana on July 11, 2021.
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