South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

A Castro will no longer be leading Cuba

Multiple relatives remain in positions of influence, power

- By Bianca Padro Ocasio

For the first time in over six decades, no one with the Castro surname will be at the helm of Cuba’s government. But there are still a few Castro family members in positions of influence.

Raúl Castro, 89, announced Friday that he is stepping down as first secretary of Cuba’s Communist Party, a position considered more powerful than president. A new leader will be named by Monday. It is widely expected that the nation’s current chief of state — not a Castro — will take over.

“I will continue participat­ing as one more revolution­ary combatant, willing to make my modest contributi­on until the end of my life,” Castro told delegates at Eighth Communist Party Congress.

By and large, the descendant­s of Fidel and Raúl Castro have shied away from politics. A handful of relatives have publicly broken with the regime. Some have come under fire for flaunting lavish lifestyles.

But within the government, there are still a few other Castros. Raúl Castro’s daughter is the leader of a national institutio­n that advocates for the rights of the LGBTQ community on the island. A son who was crucial in reestablis­hing U.S.-Cuba diplomatic relations working in intelligen­ce at the Ministry of the Interior. And a former son-in-law, Luis Alberto Rodríguez López-Callejas, is the head of the island’s powerful conglomera­te of military enterprise­s.

“The founding generation had a kind of iconic status,” said William LeoGrande, professor of government at American University and an expert on Latin America. “Now, you have a new generation who were not the heroes of the triumph of

the revolution. They’ve got to sort of prove their legitimacy by performanc­e. And in Cuba, the performanc­e is making the economy better.”

The change in power is taking place at a time when the island’s leaders are trying to diversify their ranks and hand over the reins to a new generation not alive during the 1959 revolution. But it’s unclear whether the Castro kin will play an outsize role. Despite the handing of power from one Castro brother to another, both of whom played major roles during the revolution, Cuba isn’t likely to become a family dynasty.

At the forefront of the new generation is Mariela Castro Espín, the 58-yearold daughter of Raúl Castro and Vilma Espín. In an island with a dark history of persecutin­g gay and lesbian people, she has been a fervent activist for LGBTQ rights in Cuba and leads the Cuban National Center for Sex Education. In 2014, she

became the first member of Cuba’s National Assembly to vote against a piece of legislatio­n that sought to ban discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n. She argued the proposal did not include language protecting employees based on gender identity.

Independen­t activists have criticized Castro Espín for not going far enough to criticize her family’s authoritar­ian rule. And while she led a fight to include equal marriage in the island’s constituti­onal reform in 2019, the proposal was scrapped following pressure from Evangelica­l churches, casting doubt on the extent of her influence.

Her younger brother, Alejandro Castro Espín, 55, has held more powerful roles as a national security adviser to their father and head of intelligen­ce at the Ministry of the Interior in Cuba. He was a visible figure during Cuba’s negotiatio­ns with the United States to set the terms

of President Barack Obama’s policies of re-engagement towards the island.

Another powerful figure in government within the Castro family is Luis Alberto Rodríguez López-Callejas, Raúl Castro’s former son-inlaw. He’s the head of GAESA, the island’s conglomera­te of military companies, which controls over 50 lucrative businesses in the island’s tourism, remittance­s, real estate, shipping, constructi­on and other important sectors.

He is believed to have had a heavy hand in electing the current prime minister, Manuel Marrero, who was previously in charge of a tourism chain run by GAESA.

Perhaps more importantl­y, LeoGrande said, is that while these three main figures may continue to be relevant in Cuba’s government, there’s pressure for the party to expand its power structure to include women, Black Cubans and younger leaders.

“I think it’s a politicall­y dangerous time for the government,” LeoGrande said. “If they don’t make progress in representi­ng those constituen­cies, it shows a kind of unresponsi­veness to the country’s political needs.”

Raúl Castro’s exit from the party is taking place amid soaring inequality, crippling sanctions that have limited the transfer of remittance­s from abroad, and ongoing protests from artists and activists. Images of the Castro grandchild­ren enjoying lives of luxury have infuriated many.

Tony Castro Ulloa, one of Fidel Castro’s grandsons, regularly documents lavish trips around the world and vacations in parts Cuba that are legally closed off to island residents. Sandro Castro, another grandson, manages nightclubs throughout Havana and was recently seen in an Instagram video that went viral drinking a beer behind the wheel of a

Mercedes Benz, bragging about driving over the speed limit.

Raúl Castro’s granddaugh­ter, Vilma Rodríguez, has been chastised online for reportedly profiting from several Airbnb properties on the island, including a mansion for $650 a night in the capital city, an astronomic­al price for most Cuban residents.

The youngest Castro descendant­s’ lifestyle “speaks not so much about a family dynasty that wants to perpetuate itself in power, but rather a group of people who’ve used their connection­s to have a life of luxuries,” said Prof. Jorge Duany, director of the Cuban Research Institute at Florida Internatio­nal University.

Since Fidel Castro’s death in 2016, Raúl Castro has appointed loyalists to key positions, but deviated from the behavior of other autocratic regimes in which the leader’s descendant­s are seen as the rightful heirs to power, said Arturo López Levy, a Cuba expert and professor of Internatio­nal Relations and Politics at Holy Names University.

“I think the totalitari­an period of the Cuban revolution had, as an essential component, Fidel Castro’s charisma,” said López Levy. “That particular moment has already passed and it has left, as a consequenc­e, a halo deep within the political base that has followed him.”

He said that the “continuity” of Cuba’s communist system has little to do with family ties. Raúl Castro followed in his brother’s footsteps, López Levy said, not just because they were close family, but because there was no other leader from the “historic generation” of rebel commanders who could reasonably step in.

“So what’s going to happen to the Castro family? They will continue having a privileged position,” he said. “Does that mean they will manage the country? I don’t think so.”

 ?? FILE ?? Fidel Castro, left, and his brother Raúl Castro, then president of Cuba, confer during the Communist Party Congress in Havana on April 19, 2011. Raúl Castro announced Friday that he is handing over leadership of Cuba’s powerful Communist Party to a younger generation, leaving the island nation without a Castro at its helm for the first time in over 60 years.
FILE Fidel Castro, left, and his brother Raúl Castro, then president of Cuba, confer during the Communist Party Congress in Havana on April 19, 2011. Raúl Castro announced Friday that he is handing over leadership of Cuba’s powerful Communist Party to a younger generation, leaving the island nation without a Castro at its helm for the first time in over 60 years.

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