- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 07:47:48 -0500 To: undisclosed-recipients:; Subject: Radio Havana Cuba-28 January 2002 Radio Havana Cuba-28 January 2002 Via NY Transfer News * All the News That Doesn't Fit Radio Havana Cuba - News Update - 28 January 2002 . *RAUL CASTRO DESCRIBES NEW CLIMATE IN CUBA-US RELATIONS *CUBAN YOUTH PAY HOMAGE TO NATIONAL HERO JOSE MARTI *NEW HONDURAN GOVERNMENT RATIFIES DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH CUBA *CUBAN DELEGATION TAKES PART IN INTERNATIONAL ENCOUNTER OF COMMUNISTS *TRAVEL OPTIONS FROM MEXICO TO CUBA EXPAND *INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY QUESTIONS GREEN BERET RAID IN AFGHANISTAN *WASHINGTON INSISTS THAT DETAINEES ARE NOT PRISONERS OF WAR *ANGER GROWS AMONG PALESTINIANS OVER WASHINGTON'S MIDDLE EAST POLICIES *Viewpoint: THE 149th ANNIVERSARY OF THE BIRTH OF JOSE MARTI . *RAUL CASTRO DESCRIBES NEW CLIMATE IN CUBA-US RELATIONS Havana, January 28 (RHC)--The Minister of Cuba's Revolutionary Armed Forces, Raul Castro Ruz, told reporters in Havana over the weekend that relations between the United States and Cuba are advancing slowly, step-by-step, and that a new climate prevails regarding those relations. Raul Castro, who is also the second secretary of the Cuban Communist Party, said that relations between the two nations could improve, and that any goodwill gesture on the part of Washington will find an equal response on the part of Cuba. He explained that the process is slow, despite the ever-growing numbers of people in the U.S. who oppose the 40-year long blockade. Raúl Castro said that there could be a mutually beneficial rapprochement as long as it is based on mutual respect and non-interference in the internal affairs of the other nation. He noted, however, that a spokesperson for the White House or the State Department may one day say something and complicate things between the two nations -- pointing out that within the U.S. administration itself, there are forces that represent different tendencies. The Cuban defense minister reaffirmed that within the framework of relations with the U.S., there are sacred, inalienable principles like sovereignty and self-determination that Cuba will never renounce. He also pointed to Washington's military presence at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantánamo, which is against the will of the Cuban people. "They are there," said the Cuban minister of defense. "That is a fact and we can not ignore that fact." He went on to say that neither is the United States pleased with having Cuba -- a socialist society -- near their shores. In other comments to reporters, Raul Castro said that the Lourdes Electronic Radar Station has been dismantled and Cuban authorities expect the Russians will soon take away all the equipment. Cuban Army General Raul Castro told reporters over the weekend that the antennas were shut down on December 29th and that none of the equipment at the radar station is functioning. Raul Castro said that only 50 Russian technicians remain at the radar station, which had originally housed more than 700. He said that as soon as the Russians remove all the remaining equipment, Cuba would make a decision on what to do with the area and invite the media to tour the former facility. In October, Moscow announced it would close the Lourdes Electronic Radar Station in January, claiming that it was doing so for economic reasons. But Havana strongly protested the move, noting that it was coming at a very dangerous time in world events and without having consulted with Cuban authorities. *CUBAN YOUTH PAY HOMAGE TO NATIONAL HERO JOSE MARTI Havana, January 28 (RHC)--Delegates to the 10th Congress of the Cuban Federation of High School Students (FEEM) dedicated Sunday's plenary session in Havana to Cuba's National Hero José Martí on the occasion of the 149th anniversary of his birth, on January 28th, 1853. The more than 1,300 delegates and guests to the congress of Cuban high school students analyzed the validity today of Martí's anti-imperialist ideals. Participants in the Three-day Congress are also discussing issues related to the combination of educational, sports and recreational activities and professional training and they are taking advantage of the meeting to exchange opinions with young people of their age from around the world. Cuban children also paid homage to the man who dedicated his life and most of his vast literary works to them. Over 1,460,000 members of the Pioneers children's organization commemorated the 149th anniversary of the birth of Jose Marti in schools and plazas, island wide. Some 24,000 school age children here in Havana placed a floral wreath at the monument to the Cuban national hero at Revolution Square. Martí said "nothing could ever be more important than children because children are the hope for a better future for all of humanity." The 149th anniversary of the birth of José Martí was also commemorated Sunday evening with hundreds of torches held aloft by delegates to the 10th Congress of the Federation of High School Students, university students and workers. The march began at the historical grand staircase of the University of Havana and concluded at the Fragua Martiana -a museum built on the ruins of a rock quarry, where in 1869 José Martí was sentenced to forced labor at the age of 16, for his revolutionary activities. Heading the Sunday night march were Cuban Defense Minister, Raúl Castro Ruz and other Cuban leaders who initiated the torchlight march tradition in 1953, on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the birth of José Martí. Raúl Castro highlighted the difference between this march as it's held today with the participation of students, workers and police marching together to pay homage to the national hero and what it was like before 1959, when henchmen and police of the Batista dictatorship were sent to break up the demonstration. Speakers at this year's homage said Cuba's salute to Jose Marti comes at a moment when Cubans are immersed in what President Fidel Castro has termed "a revolution within the revolution." This is a reference to the national campaign underway to upgrade the cultural level of the entire population -a campaign inspired by José Martí's idea that "peoples can only be free when their children are well educated." To the new generations of Cubans, Martí is remembered as the man who taught us that a dignified person is one who chooses to be useful to others, rather than choosing to have a more profitable life. *NEW HONDURAN GOVERNMENT RATIFIES DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH CUBA Havana, January 28 (RHC)--New Honduran President Ricardo Maduro will maintain diplomatic relations with Cuba, said the country's Foreign Minister Guillermo Pérez Cadalzo. Bilateral diplomatic relations between Tegucigalpa and Havana were reestablished Saturday evening by out-going Honduran President Carlos Flores, in what constituted one of his last actions as president of the Central American nation. The Honduran foreign minister termed as "a normal step" the reestablishment of diplomatic ties with Cuba. He explained that under the new administration, his country's foreign policy remains the same and President Ricardo Maduro will work to strengthen the already existing diplomatic ties with the Caribbean island. *CUBAN DELEGATION TAKES PART IN INTERNATIONAL ENCOUNTER OF COMMUNISTS Montevideo, January 28 (RHC)--A Cuban delegation, headed by Communist Party Political Bureau member José Ramon Balaguer, has arrived in Uruguay to take part in an international encounter of communist organizations from Latin America, Europe and the Caribbean. Upon arriving in Montevideo, the Uruguayan capital, Balaguer, who is also a member of the Cuban Council of State, highlighted the need for the meeting in order to analyze problems affecting today's world. "We should work together toward finding solutions to problems through alliance, cooperation and coordination with other social forces that are suffering the effects of imposed neo-liberalism," said the Cuban official. The international seminar in Montevideo gathers together leaders of communist organizations from Uruguay, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Bolivia and Paraguay, among other Latin American nations. Also on hand are the general secretaries of the Communist Parties of Spain, Italy and Greece. *TRAVEL OPTIONS FROM MEXICO TO CUBA EXPAND Havana, January 28 (RHC)--The travel agency Viñales Tours, considered Cuba's most successful Latin American tour operator, has signed an agreement with Mexicana Airlines to expand travel options to the Caribbean island. Viñales Tours' General Manager, Dolores Albuerne, announced in Havana that beginning March 1st, Mexican tourists would have a new scheduled flight to Cuba. The new air route will leave from Tijuana in Northern Mexico, with a stop over in Monterrey and then on to its final destination, the Cuban capital. The new route, the second agreement signed between Viñales Tours and Mexicana Airline, will have scheduled flights every Friday. *INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY QUESTIONS GREEN BERET RAID IN AFGHANISTAN Kabul, January 28 (RHC)--News reports about a U.S. Army raid on an old grade school in central Afghanistan have raised concerns about possible human rights violations. The attack, carried out by Green Beret special forces, killed at least 21 local residents. Concerns were raised when neighbors and townspeople who had escaped the attack ventured back to inspect the damage. They reportedly found the charred bodies of more than a dozen men who had been shot and burned in the rooms of one of the two compounds. Others said they found two bodies outside the compound, their hands tied behind them with strips of tough white plastic. The Pentagon defends the raid as an appropriate military action, saying they checked to make sure the area was Taliban. But in dozens of interviews this weekend, residents in this town about 100 miles north of Kandahar in central Afghanistan said the two-hour raid before dawn, which ended with a U.S. plane firing at the compound, was an error. Local officials say the former grade school was briefly used by the Taliban, but was recently being used as a weapons depot for a disarmament drive. All the officials and local commanders interviewed in the area, including the provincial governor, insist that Taliban fighters are no longer in the area, which has been quiet since the interim government took power in Kabul over a month ago. Residents expressed surprise at the attack, saying that everyone in the area is anti-Taliban. Many told reporters they suspected that the United States had been misled by false intelligence information deliberately spread by one of the two factions in town that were vying to control weapons left behind by departing Taliban. The weapons had been collected to put them under the control of the interim government, as part of a campaign being carried out throughout Afghanistan. According to reports, one side or the other gave a false tip to the U.S. Army forces in order to destroy its rival, only to have the Pentagon send in the Green Beret forces to attack both compounds. Throughout the war, the Pentagon has solicited local intelligence, but admits that much of the information is unreliable. People in the town, describing the dispute between the factions, said it had been created by a recent change in governors, both of whom were appointed by Afghanistan's interim leader, Hamid Karzai. It rested on who is the rightful district government chief and who has the right to collect weapons. Each group had amassed a sizable arsenal during a government-ordered disarmament program, and in the dispute over who is in charge, neither side had been willing to turn over its weapons. One local resident told reporters that after the U.S. Army special forces left, gunfire and rockets rained from the sky, destroying the ammunition compound. The Green Beret forces had apparently called in an air raid by an AC-130 flying warship. Another resident said he went back to the site of the attack the next day and found a piece of paper with an American flag on the windshield of one of the compound's destroyed trucks. Large letters on the paper read, "God Bless America," and in one corner, someone had written: "Have a nice day. From Damage, Inc." *WASHINGTON INSISTS THAT DETAINEES ARE NOT PRISONERS OF WAR Washington, January 28 (RHC)--U.S. officials have announced that prisoners captured during the war in Afghanistan will not be designated as prisoners of war. U.S. Vice President Richard Cheney answered questions by reporters on a Sunday morning news program, saying that prisoners held by U.S. forces will not be granted treatment under the Geneva Convention. The vice president's remarks were echoed by U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. The head of the Pentagon, arriving at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantánamo, said: "They are not P.O.W.'s and they will not be determined to be P.O.W.'s." Both administration officials referred to a debate in Washington on whether or not to adhere to the 1949 Geneva Convention regarding the treatment of prisoners. According to reports from the U.S. capital, Secretary of State Colin Powell agrees that the captives should not be given prisoner of war status, but has asked the administration to study how that relates to the Geneva Convention. Cheney said the Convention does not apply to those captives because they were not conventional soldiers, but terrorists operating outside internationally accepted norms. Reflecting the debate within the administration, the vice president said that the question was whether the prisoners should be treated within the confines of the convention or outside it. He prefers outside, because it would allow -- in his words -- "flexibility in interrogation." The Number Two man in Washington said that the U.S. needs to have a free hand to interrogate the prisoners and "extract from them whatever information they have." He said that one line of thought is that the Geneva Convention does not apply in cases of terrorism. *ANGER GROWS AMONG PALESTINIANS OVER WASHINGTON'S MIDDLE EAST POLICIES Jerusalem, January 28 (RHC)--Anger is growing among Palestinians over Washington's policies in the Middle East. Tension is on the rise following the Bush administration's endorsement of recent Israeli military actions and the announcement that the White House is considering breaking ties with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. Many observers warn that a hardening of the U.S. position, which is at odds with the Europeans, is counter-productive, given that it will fuel militant groups, making it harder to prevent attacks on Israel. One commentator pointed out that just a few months ago, the U.S. president was talking about a two-state solution for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell referred to the need for an end to Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories. But the White House has since turned its back on Yasser Arafat, claiming he was behind an arms shipment that was intercepted by Israeli commandos earlier this month in the Red Sea. Palestinians have always considered Washington to be pro-Israel, but now many believe that the Bush administration is applauding the actions of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon -- working to destroy the Palestine National Authority and the possibilities of peace. Arab criticism of Washington focuses on the fact that the U.S. is pressing Arafat to jail members of armed groups attacking Israelis, and yet has little or nothing to say about Israel's conduct, particularly the use of U.S.-supplied F-16 war planes and assassinations of Palestinian leaders. Early Sunday morning, F-16s were back in action again -- bombing security buildings in the West Bank and Gaza City. The latest attacks injured at least two people. *Viewpoint: THE 149th ANNIVERSARY OF THE BIRTH OF JOSE MARTI "Cubans ask nothing of the world except that it recognizes and respects their sacrifices and the blood they have spilt for humankind." Although these words were written by Cuba's national hero, Jose Marti, more than a century ago, they still apply this very day, the 149th anniversary of Marti's birth. A great thinker and one of the most remarkable figures of Latin America's struggle for freedom, Jose Marti had the ability to foresee political events on the continent. After spending 14 years in the United States he warned the region of the power and ambitions of its huge neighbor, having lived, as he called it, "within the entrails of the monster." He saw clearly that US involvement in the war of independence against Spain was for reasons of aggrandizement and regional dominance. His fears were realized barely six years after his death in combat in 1895 when the 1901 Platt Ammendment handed Cuba's sovereignty to Washington on a plate. The life of Jose Marti is in fact a resume of the history of the peoples of Latin America who rebelled against the injustice of ruthless colonial powers, who sought a better future in a just society and who gave their lives so that others may live in freedom. These are sentiments that are sadly nowadays viewed with suspicion and sound almost pat. The importance of Marti, his teachings and his ideas to Cuba cannot be overstated. His writings, poetry, sayings and political wisdom continue to be at the center of socio-political life on the island, and are universally accessible. Highly cultured, he was nonetheless not a wild idealist with a complicated thought process that few could understand. Not a man who used cold reasoning to communicate his views. He was a passionate writer of poetry and stories, a man who showed great love for children and was able to write for them with as much sensitivity as he wrote for all the impoverished and repressed peoples of Latin America. Today, as much as ever, Jose Marti continues to teach us all humility, commitment and humanity. His image is seen everywhere here in a national salute to a good man who died as he had lived, defending his people and their right to a decent life with his own blood - just as he had foretold. (c) 2002 Radio Habana Cuba, NY Transfer News. 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