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By Arnold August*
On June 15, 2009, the US Supreme Court announced its
decision to reject the request for a revision of the Cuban Five case. This
demand for a review was carried out by millions of people from all walks
of life around the world, a record number of “Friends of the Court”
petitions and thousands of personalities and elected officials from every
continent. All of these pleas also came from within the USA itself.
The US brags about its political systems as being based
on the separation of powers between the Executive (President and
Vice-President), the Legislature and the Judiciary and a resulting
built-in checks and balances system. This is supposedly a superior form of
democracy based on checks and balances to avoid abuse of power by one or
the other of the three branches forming the US government.
In the US Constitution, Article II Section 2 states that
the US President has “the power to grant reprieves and pardons...”
Every indication is that President Obama, far from using his
constitutional powers to free the Cuban Five, made it clear to the Supreme
Court judges that they should rule against revision.
This has obviously been a political case right from day
one. It is even further revealed by the Supreme Court’s decision and the
shameless refusal of the judges to publicly explain to the world the basis
of their ruling. Of course the judges are not obliged to divulge it
according to the American legal system.
However, in a case such as this one in which the whole
world and many governments are watching, a public explanation was
necessary. We are perhaps witnessing one of the greatest ironies in the
current international political scene. The Cuban Five are cruelly and
politically persecuted for their peaceful anti-terrorist motivations and
activities. The reason? They are acting on behalf of and supporting the
Cuban government.
One of the main charges that Washington levies against
Cuba is lack of democracy, that it is does not, amongst other
characteristics exhibit a political system similar to the American one
which would include checks and balances. The Cuban system is in fact one
unified revolutionary peoples’ political power, from the top down and from
the bottom up including the judiciary, each enjoying its own respective
fields of competence. The relationship and inter-action of all the
different Cuban state levels between themselves including the judiciary
and all of these institutions in turn with the citizens, is a feature of
the Cuban type of democracy.
There is no need to get into a debate as to whether the
Cuban system is more democratic than the American model. However, if one
takes into account this latest Supreme Court episode of US democracy in
action on the one hand and my direct experience and study of the Cuban
political system on the other hand, Cuba has no “democracy” lessons to
take at all from the USA.
Obama must change his position and use the checks and
balances powers vested in him through the US Constitution to free the
Cuban Five now.
If ever an institution in the USA needs a check and a
balance, it is the June 15 2009 Supreme Court decision.
Obama must also take into account the offer by President
Raul Castro to exchange the 200 prisoners in Cuba and all their families
for the Cuban Five. Governments in such countries as mine, Canada, should
not be allowed to open their mouth about human rights violations in other
countries without throwing in their face the latest human rights violation
just south of the border in the USA.
*Arnold August is an author/journalist/lecturer
specializing on Cuban democracy, a member of the International Committee
for the Freedom of the Cuban Five and the Comité Fabio Di Celmo pour les 5
of the Table de concertation de solidarité Québec-Cuba. |