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Bush:
World must shape post-Castro Cuba
Yahoo! News. Olivier Knox
Thu Oct 25, 9:50 AM ET
WASHINGTON (AFP) - President George W.
Bush called on the world to steer Cuba out
of its "tropical Gulag" toward
democracy, drawing charges from Havana that
he is inciting to violence.
In his first address since 2003 to focus
solely on Cuba, Bush on Wednesday also said
he would create a "freedom fund"
to promote democratic reforms in Cuba, taking
advantage of ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro's
fading grip on power.
But he adamantly refused to lift the decades-old
US sanctions on the communist island.
"Viva Cuba libre" -- long live
a free Cuba -- Bush said in a speech at
the US State Department.
Cuba immediately fired back, with Foreign
Minister Felipe Perez Roque accusing Bush
of making "a plea for violence, a call
for the use of force to topple the revolution
and impose his ideas on Cuba."
The influential Cuban American National
Foundation welcomed Bush's call for democratic
reforms, but said his administration lacked
a clear strategy to bring about a change
in Cuba. It called for direct an substantial
assistance to Cuba's democratic opposition.
Bush called on the international community
to invest economic and political capital
in Cuba's pro-democracy movements and scolded
countries that do business with Havana as
enriching a brutal elite with an iron grip
on power.
"The socialist paradise is a tropical
Gulag," the president, who shared the
stage with relatives of jailed opponents
of Castro's regime, said in a reference
to former Soviet prison camps for political
dissidents.
Castro, 81, continues to be sidelined from
power since he underwent gastrointestinal
surgery in July 2006. Raul Castro, 76, is
serving as interim president of Cuba, while
his elder brother recovers.
Bush flatly rejected widespread calls for
lifting the nearly half-century US economic
sanctions imposed after Cuba's 1959 revolution,
including possible pending action at the
United Nations.
"As long as the regime maintains its
monopoly over the political and economic
life of the Cuban people, the United States
will keep the embargo in place," he
said, to applause from the crowd.
But Bush said US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice and Cuba-born US Commerce Secretary
Carlos Gutierrez would seek contributions
for a billion-dollar "freedom fund"
tied to future democratic reforms in Havana.
"Now is the time to stand with the
Cuban people as they stand up for their
liberty. Now is the time for the world to
put aside its differences and prepare for
Cubans' transition to a future of freedom
and progress and promise," he said.
The fund would provide grants and loans
and debt relief to Cubans -- but only once
their government has fully embraced core
liberties like freedom of speech and of
the press and periodic, free and fair multi-party
elections.
Bush also called on other countries to
make more public shows of support for pro-democracy
activists in Cuba, and warned that there
may be a price to pay for countries that
fail to help.
"The dissidents of today will be the
nation's leaders tomorrow. When freedom
finally comes, they will surely remember
who stood with them," said the president.
He also had a message for Cuba's security
apparatus, saying "When Cubans rise
up to demand their liberty, the liberty
they deserve, you've got to make a choice."
"Will you defend a disgraced and dying
order by using force against your own people
or will you embrace your people's desire
for change?" Bush said. A senior aide
had said Tuesday that this was not a call
for "armed rebellion."
Bush, who never named either Castro, ruled
out a softening of US policies if Raul were
to take over permanently and enact what
some Cubans expect to be piecemeal economic
reforms.
"We will not support the old way with
new faces, the old system held together
by new chains. The operative word in our
future dealings with Cuba is not stability;
the operative word is freedom," he
said.
But he said that he was prepared to allow
non-governmental organizations and religious
groups to provide computers and Internet
access, as long as Havana lifts restrictions
on using the World Wide Web.
And he invited young Cubans to take part
in a scholarship program.
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