THE OTHER day, Fidel Castro wrote an opinion column for Cuba’s state-run newspaper, Granma, as he has done periodically from retirement. He lavished praise on an editorial in the New York Times
that called for an end to the U.S. trade embargo on Cuba. But
Mr. Castro had one complaint: The Times mentioned the harassment of
dissidents and the still-unexplained death of a leading exponent of
democracy, Oswaldo Payá, and a younger activist, Harold Cepero, in a car wreck two years ago.
The
assertion that Cuba’s authoritarian government had yet to explain the
deaths was “slanderous and [a] cheap accusation,” Mr. Castro sputtered.
So
why has Cuba done nothing to dispel the fog of suspicion that still
lingers over the deaths? If the charge is slanderous, then it is long
past time for Mr. Castro to order a thorough investigation of what
happened on an isolated Cuban road on July 22, 2012. So far, there has been only a crude attempt at cover-up and denial.
We know something about what happened, thanks to the eyewitness account
of Ángel Carromero, the young Spanish politician who was at the wheel
of the rental car that was carrying Mr. Payá and Mr. Cepero to a meeting
with supporters. Mr. Carromero, who visited Washington last week, told
us the car was being shadowed by Cuban state security from the moment it
left Havana. He said his conversations with Mr. Payá as they traveled
were mostly about the Varela Project,
Mr. Payá’s courageous 2002 petition drive seeking to guarantee
democracy in Cuba. Many of Mr. Payá’s supporters in the project were
later arrested and imprisoned.
After
the wreck, Mr. Carromero was pressured by the Cuban authorities to
describe it as an accident caused by his reckless speeding. But he
reiterated to us last week that what really happened is that the rental
car was rammed from behind by a vehicle bearing state license plates.
Mr. Carromero showed us photographs of the damaged car, damage that
seemed inconsistent with a wreck caused by speeding. But the precise
details of what happened are unknown and need to be cleared up by a
credible investigation. Mr. Payá’s family has sought one for two years,
without success. When the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of
the Organization of American States sent a query to Cuba about the case,
they got no answer. Nothing.
The
U.S. embargo has been substantially relaxed in recent years to allow
hundreds of millions of dollars of food and medicine exports, in
addition to consumer goods supplied to Cubans by relatives in this
country. The question is whether a further relaxation is merited. The
regime’s persecution of dissidents is unceasing; it continues to
imprison American Alan Gross
on false charges. While Cuba has toyed with economic liberalization and
lifted travel restrictions for some, we see no sign that the Castro
brothers are loosening their grip. Fully lifting the embargo now would
reward and ratify their intransigence.
A
concession such as ending the trade embargo should not be exchanged for
nothing. It should be made when Cuba grants genuine freedom to its
people, the goal cherished by Mr. Payá.
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