Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08HAVANA166
2008-02-19 21:15:00
CONFIDENTIAL
US Interests Section Havana
Cable title:  

HOLGUIN BISHOP SAYS SITUATION IN EASTERN CUBA IS

Tags:  CU PGOV PHUM PINR PREL 
pdf how-to read a cable
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C O N F I D E N T I A L HAVANA 000166 

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DEPT FOR WHA/CCA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/19/2017
TAGS: CU PGOV PHUM PINR PREL
SUBJECT: HOLGUIN BISHOP SAYS SITUATION IN EASTERN CUBA IS
CONSTANTLY CHANGING

REF: A. (A) HAVANA 136

B. (B) HAVANA 1018

Classified By: COM: M.E. Parmly : For reasons 1.4 b/d

C O N F I D E N T I A L HAVANA 000166

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C O R R E C T E D COPY DELETING SECSTATE AS INFO ADDEE

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR WHA/CCA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/19/2017
TAGS: CU PGOV PHUM PINR PREL
SUBJECT: HOLGUIN BISHOP SAYS SITUATION IN EASTERN CUBA IS
CONSTANTLY CHANGING

REF: A. (A) HAVANA 136

B. (B) HAVANA 1018

Classified By: COM: M.E. Parmly : For reasons 1.4 b/d


1. (C) Summary: On 18 February, Monsignor Emilio
Aranguren, Bishop of Holguin, described the situation in
Eastern Cuba as in constant flux. He expressed that unlike
in Western Cuba, where a great deal of the opposition is well
organized with specific goals, in Eastern Cuba people react
to events. He described violence and deaths erupting from a
recent series of evictions. He received information from a
Colonel in the Armed Forces that there was an effort to use
such events to force out the First Secretary of the Province.
The internal conflicts within the government combined with an
increasing tendency of individuals to demonstrate
dissatisfaction is creating an increasingly fluid situation.
End summary.


2. (C) Monsignor Emilio Aranguren during a discussion on 18
February with COM and Pol off stated that in looking at the
situation in Eastern Cuba one can only use the gerund form of
verbs; everything is evolving constantly and things are
changing rapidly. He stated that in the Western part of Cuba
there are many highly organized opposition groups, but in the
East people simply react to events. These reactions can be
dramatic and unexpected. He said that this was an area of
the worst rural poverty in the country, where many households
lack electricity and an adequate water supply. Much of the
population is consumed in a daily struggle to survive and
discontent is rife.


2. (C) Monsignor Aranguren illustrated his point by
describing heavily resisted evictions that occurred at the
end of January (see Reftel). These involved people who were
squatters in abandoned houses and persons who had constructed
their own makeshift dwellings in a neighborhood known as El
Piti on the outskirts of Holguin. He said that he had tried
his best to stave off the evictions during the Holiday
season. He stated that the government originally wanted to
remove 26 households and in their first attempts were met
with heavy resistance. Eventually the government entered in
force and evicted six families, and demolished their homes.
Aranguren stated that there were five deaths during the
confrontations. He said that one woman killed a police
officer when she struck him in the throat with a metal pole.
He said that there was also a case of suicide of one of the
residents and another died of a heart attack during the
evictions.


3. (C) Aranguren described a conversation that he had with a
Colonel in the Armed Forces who stated that there was a
concerted effort by some members of the government to use
incidents such as these highly confrontational evictions to
force out the First Secretary of the Province.


4. (C) He also talked about how one of his parishioners who
is a University student in Santiago de Cuba in the Autumn
blocked the car of the University Director, known to be a
militant Communist, to protest the security situation on
campus after the rape of a student. These events sparked a
prolonged protest by about 200 students. Aranguren gave this
as a further illustration as to how individuals are
increasingly willing to take dramatic action. This student
was later subject to disciplinary measures.


5. (C) Comment: Aranguren describes a very fluid situation
of popular dissatisfaction with living conditions combined
with an intense internal government struggle where one
faction is willing to take advantage of highly risky events
to put pressure on specific officials. A recent incident
where a student at the College of Computer Science sharply
questioned Ricardo de Alarcon, President of the Cuban
National Assembly, has been interpreted by some Cubans as a
sign that Cubans are more willing to speak up and by others
as a manipulation of events to embarrass a high government
official. Factors are combining that could lead to protests
being ignited rapidly with unexpected intensity.



PARMLY