By: Mary Anastasia
O'Grady.
The Wall Street Journal
March 31, 2006
In the early morning hours
of Nov. 29, uniformed Cuban police raided the Havana home of
medical doctor Dariel "Darsi" Ferrer.
"In front of my sick wife
and my four-year-old son, they confiscated a laptop, a printer,
various bottles of medicine and all the papers they could find,"
Dr. Ferrer reported on the Web site Cartadecuba.com. Nearly four
hours later the marauders marched off with the doctor's
property, leaving him with a citation to appear at the police
station the next day.
Dr. Ferrer had sinned
against the Revolution: He is an Afro-Cuban medical professional
who, noting the country's abysmal state of health care,
established an independent health and human rights clinic. "We
have dedicated ourselves to offering free medical attention to
those in need and visiting extremely poor communities where
scarcities strike marginalized Cubans daily, to offer health
services, give medicine, clothing and toys and to share the
suffering of those beings," Dr. Ferrer reported.
The 36-year-old doctor's
selfless dedication to others would win praise from any
government genuinely concerned about the welfare of citizens.
However, in Cuba, his work
scandalizes the state. It has rewarded him by shutting him out
of the official medical community and refusing to allow him any
form of gainful employment. Along with his wife and son, he has
been regularly harassed and terrorized by the government's
infamous "repudiation squads," organized mob violence unleashed
against non-conformers. The Nov. 29 visit was the first time the
regime sent uniformed agents to his home to allege a crime.
Dr. Ferrer is a victim of
what human rights observers say is the one of the most brutal
crackdowns in the island's history, one that has received little
notice in the U.S. "Why now?" one might ask. Perhaps it is in
preparation for the day when, as Cubans like to say, a
"biological solution" will end Castro's reign. Perhaps it is
because Cubans have grown bolder in recent years, increasingly
expressing dissent openly.
Certainly, there is more
civil disobedience, ranging from silent, prayerful marches by
women whose loved ones are political prisoners to public
statements from medical professionals like Dr. Ferrer. Pilfering
from the state has reportedly increased too.
French jurist Christine
Chanet, the U.N. Human Rights Commission's "expert"
on Cuba, acknowledged the
wave of repression this month. Though Cuban officials have
refused her access, she noted that her sources report, "in
2005 more people were
arrested and given disproportionate sentences for expressing
dissident political opinions." Since she is French and a UNHRC
bureaucrat, however, Ms. Chanet blamed the brutality on the U.S.
By supporting Cuban democrats, she explained, the U.S. "provide[s]
the Cuban authorities with an opportunity to tighten repression
against them."
That is the kind of
international "help" that long-suffering Cubans have had to get
used to, leaving them with the feeling that they are but pawns
in the petty, jealous U.N. game of challenging U.S. hegemony.
However, while the French bureaucrat is busy scoring points in
the salons of Geneva, Dr. Ferrer is struggling to stay alive.
His is a particularly brave struggle.
Like hundreds of José
Six-Packs who have joined Cuban resistance movements, Dr.
Ferrer's lack of celebrity is a real disadvantage.
International recognition
can provide some protection to a dissident. But up to now, he
has been a faceless soul behind the Tropical Iron Curtain, with
a family to care for and living on practically nothing. Fidel
already knows he has nothing to fear from the likes of Ms.
Chanet, so the cost of crushing Dr. Ferrer is very low.
Dr. Ferrer's race also
works against him. Independent thinking is heresy for any Cuban
but Afro-Cubans are taught to be especially grateful for -- and
obedient to -- the Revolution. They are supposed to signal to
the world that though they may appear poor, malnourished and
oppressed, they are actually living contentedly on Master
Fidel's plantation. Dr. Ferrer has not been playing the game.
Another reason to silence
the doctor is his honest, professional assessment of Cuba's
deteriorating medical system. What Dr. Ferrer and the doctors
working with him at the clinic have observed and publicly
denounced is the polar opposite of the health-care paradise that
Fidel's illusionists have worked years to promote. The collapse
of this last "justification" for totalitarian government --
something that shamefully even former Secretary of State Colin
Powell once praised Castro for -- makes Fidel's 50 years of
failure impossible to deny.
This makes Dr. Ferrer's
work exceedingly dangerous but despite the persecution, he works
tirelessly for the sick, the poor and the imprisoned.
The clinic writes
"respectful letters" to high-ranking government officials,
raising concerns about public health issues and proposing
solutions. In a July 2005 document called "Health Authorities
and the Complicity of Silence," Dr. Ferrer complained of the
deaths of dozens of children in recent months owing to increased
cases of transmittable diseases. He expressed concern that
meningitis, dengue fever, hepatitis and leprosy could become
epidemics. Clinic workers pay special attention to HIV/AIDS
patients, particularly shut-ins, and advocate for the medical
needs of political prisoners and for victims of medical
negligence.
With thousands of medical
professionals on assignment overseas to advance Castro's
do-gooder image with Ms. Chanet and her ilk, Cubans are hurting.
But so what? As former
Brigadier Gen. Rafael Del Pino, who defected in 1987, observed
in his 1990 book "Proa a La Libertad," ("Toward Freedom"), Fidel
has another agenda. He "was of the idea that any person whose
health is returned or who receives education will at least never
be his enemy, even if that does not turn them into an ally," the
general wrote, referring to the rationale behind sending doctors
and teachers to Nicaragua in the 1980s. This strategy continues
today. Only now, Dr. Ferrer has made it clear that Cubans
themselves do not enjoy the same "good will." For that, he is
being intolerably abused by the regime.
Published in: THE WALL
STREET JOURNAL. Friday, March 31, 2006; Page A17
Dr. Ferrer is the Director
of Center for Health and Human Rights "Juan Bruno Zayas" in
Havana, Cuba.
Address: Calle San
Bernardino 265 entre Serrano y Durege, Reparto Santo Suarez,
Municipio Diez de Octubre, Ciudad de la Habana. Cuba. Codigo
Postal -10500.
E-mail:
centrosalud_dh@yahoo.com