|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : South
& Central America
US spurns father's appeal for return of Elian Gonzalez
Cuban child sacrificed to right-wing political agenda
By Bill Vann
14 December 1999
Use
this version to print
The case of Elian Gonzalez, a six-year-old Cuban child who
miraculously survived two days at sea after his mother and nine
others died trying to reach the Florida coast, has provided the
world with a spectacle of imperialist arrogance and hypocrisy.
The boy was brought ashore Thanksgiving day by a fisherman
who found him floating in an inner tube. He was then effectively
abducted by right-wing Cuban exile elements, with the complicity
of the US Immigration and Naturalization Service and the Clinton
administration.
Washington has thus far ignored demands of the boy's father,
Juan Miguel Gonzalez, and of his grandparents and other relatives
for his return to Cuba. Instead, though he is officially still
in the custody of the INS, young Elian was handed over to a great
uncle and aunt who quickly placed the child at the disposal of
the Cuban American National Foundation (CANF), the main anti-Castro
exile front.
This organization, which exercises a disproportionate influence
over both the Democratic and Republican parties with regard to
US policy toward Cuba as well as local politics in south Florida,
has been linked to acts of terrorism directed against the Caribbean
island nation.
With complete indifference to the welfare of a child, who had
just seen his mother and her companions die horrible deaths and
faced the terror of floating by himself in the open sea, the CANF
rushed to exploit the boy as a pawn in an anti-Castro propaganda
campaign. Posters bearing his face were printed up by the thousands
proclaiming him "another child victim of Castro."
Elian, who turned six shortly after arriving in Florida, became
the center of a media circus manipulated by the right-wing exile
leaders. The first pictures of the boy showed him wearing a T-shirt
bearing the logo of the Cuban American National Foundation.
He was paraded before television cameras to tell the world
that he wanted to stay in the US, and shown seated among piles
of toys and trinkets showered upon him. His birthday was celebrated
in similarly lavish style, with more than 50 guests and a huge
cake. That such displays might not be in the best interests of
a child who has just gone through the most traumatic experience
imaginable apparently never occurred to his American relatives
or their wealthy backers. Only after more than a week of parading
him before the cameras did his great uncle restrict media access
to the boy, saying he was doing so on the advice of psychologists
and lawyers.
What any of this means to Elian is far from clear. In telephone
conversations with his father in Cuba he has promised that he
is returning home soon and asked that his classmates at school
be told to take care of his things while he is gone.
The boy's teacher broke down in tears when interviewed by Cuban
television. "When I see his empty chair," she said,
"and the pressures he is being put under in the US, so small
and with such a horrible and recent experience, it breaks my heart.
You have to be blind, sick with hatred to use a child in this
situation in your policy against the Cuban revolution."
By all accounts, the boy's father was a loving and close parent.
Separated from Elian's mother, he took care of the boy five nights
a week, with the child going to his mother's home on weekends.
He has insisted that the mother took the child without his knowledge
or permission on the tragic voyage to Florida.
Had Elian been from any other country in the world, there can
be little doubt that he would have been sent back to his father
in short order. US law consistently sides with a biological parent
over any other relative in custody cases in the absence of proven
evidence of abuse. Because Elian is Cuban, however, he has been
caught in a web of political intrigue spun by Washington and the
exile organizations. In the latest maneuver, lawyers have filed
an application for asylum on Elian's behalf, claiming that he
has reason to fear retaliation if returned to his homeland. While
ridiculous on its face, the application is aimed at stalling any
move to return the boy for many more months.
While the right-wing Cuban organizations in Miami have insinuated
that Elian's father is demanding the return of his son only because
of pressure from Cuban President Fidel Castro, it is clear that
inducements of a different sort are being offered by his distant
relatives in Miami to prevent him from going back to his home.
According to a report published in the Washington Post,
exile figures have stated that they are prepared to raise up to
$2 million to demonstrate that the shipwrecked child can enjoy
an opulent lifestyle unattainable by his counterparts in Cuba.
Meanwhile, Elian's father reported that when he spoke to him
on the boy's birthday, he could hear an adult voice in the background
instructing the child to tell his father that he wants to stay
in Miami to become a pilot for Brothers to the Rescue. This outfit
has been used by the counterrevolutionary exile leadership to
stage provocations against Cuba in an attempt to promote a US
military intervention.
The tug-of-war over the Cuban six-year-old has given rise to
some of the biggest demonstrations in Cuba's history. More than
1 million people took to the streets from Havana to Santiago demanding
Elian's return and shouting anti-US slogans.
The American government and the media have attempted to dismiss
these outpourings as mere stage-managed events orchestrated by
the Castro government. While no doubt the Castro regime is attempting
to use the incident to further its own maneuvers with Washington,
the genuine outrage felt by masses of Cubans over the Elian affair
is deeply rooted.
What is the real argument being made by those who insist that
the child should be kept in Miami and torn from his family? Behind
all the fulminations about dictatorial practices in Cuba and his
right to "grow up in freedom," their bottom line is
that in America he can get rich, while in Cuba the social transformations
wrought by the 1959 revolution have closed that avenue for the
present. The clear implication is that lack of the wherewithal
to provide what is known as "the American way of life"
is itself grounds to brand a parent unfit to raise a child.
This argument reduces all Cubans to a status of less than human.
To follow its logic, the masses of Latin America and all the former
colonial countries have no right to ask for the return of their
children should they, by a stroke of luck, be kidnapped and transported
to the North American promised land.
There is a smug and sinister conception underlying the claims
of those in Miami who say they are only doing what is best for
the child. It is self-evident, they maintain, that growing up
with access to money in the US is preferable to living with limited
resources in an impoverished country, no matter that a child is
deprived of the only family he has ever known.
If "welfare of the child" is really the concern of
the Cuban American National Foundation, however, the question
is raised, why stop with Elian? There are countless hundreds of
thousands of children all over Latin America who are far more
in need of such a rescue. Why not bring the abandoned children
from the streets of Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Bolivia
and Brazil to Miami and set them up in style as well?
The real aim of the exile groups in Miami is to exploit the
tragedy of Elian Gonzalez to further their own political influence
and pursue their ultimate goal of regaining control of Cuba's
wealth and resources.
They have attempted to make their case both with threatssending
demonstrators into the streets denouncing President Clinton as
a coward for acknowledging that the father has some rights in
this controversyand other forms of persuasion. Jorge Mas
Santos, the president of the Cuban American National Foundation,
approached Clinton at a Democratic fundraising dinner in Coral
Gables, Florida, handing him a letter from Elian's relatives asking
for a personal audience in which the six-year-old could tell the
US president that he wants to stay in Miami. Clinton previously
won both political support and campaign funding from the CANF
by tailoring his line on Cuba to its right-wing agenda.
The tragedy of Elian Gonzalez finds its source primarily in
the continuation of this rabid anti-Cuban policy by the US government.
On the one hand, the US maintains an economic embargo against
the island and attempts to exact retribution against all of Washington's
economic rivals who dare to seek profits on the island. The impact
on the Cuban people has been economic privation and shortages,
drastically exacerbated in the wake of the Soviet Union's collapse.
Social hardships generate economic refugees from Cuba, just as
they do from the rest of Latin America.
On the other hand, the US maintains a unique immigration policy
with relation to the country under what is known as the Cuban
Adjustment Act. This grants legal resident status to any Cuban
national who manages to set foot on American soil.
The policy has given rise to grotesque distinctions between
what are popularly referred to as "wet-foot" and "dry-foot"
Cuban immigrants.
Those who are caught in US waters before reaching land are
repatriated to Cuba under an agreement forged between Washington
and Havana in 1994-95, following the last major exodus of Cuban
refugees. Cuban patrol boats monitor craft leaving the island
and, failing to turn them back, radio ahead to the US Coast Guard
to intercept them. Havana has pledged as part of the agreement
not to retaliate against those who are repatriated. For its part,
Washington has agreed to an expansion of legal visas for Cubans
seeking to leave for the US to 20,000 a year.
The policy of granting residence to any Cuban managing to reach
land has given rise to a profitable and growing trade in smuggling
people off the island. Cubans in Miami with small boats charging
between $8,000 and $12,000 per person work in league with cohorts
on the island in arranging illegal crossings. The profit motive
dictates packing the small craft with as many human beings as
possible, frequently leading to shipwrecks.
No such policy, of course, exists in relation to the far greater
numbers of Mexicans, Central Americans and other Latin American
undocumented immigrants seeking to flee poverty and oppression
across the heavily fortified US southern border. Whether caught
in the waters of the Rio Grande or in the deserts of the southwest,
they are sent back to their countries with no recourse.
The case of Elian could sink talks scheduled for December 13
in Havana between the US and Cuba on the migration question. The
breakdown of the current arrangement between Washington and Havana
could lead to yet another crisis of "rafters" heading
for the Florida coast.
Relations between the two countries were further undermined
by the acquittal in a federal court in Puerto Rico of a group
of exiles charged with plotting to assassinate Fidel Castro at
a Latin American summit conference on the Venezuelan island of
Margarita in 1997. The five individuals, who were linked to the
Cuban American National Foundation, were caught by the US Coast
Guard off the shores of Puerto Rico in a boat loaded with weapons,
ammunition and other military supplies. One of the group confessed
that they were on their way to the summit with the objective of
killing the Cuban leader.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |