Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Cuban Journalists Say No to Change

Cuban Journalists Say No to Change
July 16, 2013
Like baseball players, Cuban journalists continue to wait for a sign
from the bench.

HAVANA TIMES — The Ninth Congress of the Cuban Journalists Association
(UPEC) has ended. Judging from the information published by the official
media, under the direct control of the Cuban Communist Party, we can
expect very few changes in the country's official journalistic environment.

Unless some agreeably surprising change occurs over the next few days,
we can rather expect journalists to continue to work under the direction
of the "coaches", the Party's Ideology Department, that is, which will
continue to give out instructions in signs from the dugout, as any good
team manager is expected to do. This is the way things have been until
now, and by the looks of it, the way things will continue to be.

I want to refer my readers to the exhaustive analysis of Cuba's press
which appears in the last issue of the Cuban, Catholic periodical
Espacio Laical ("Secular Space"). Titled "Proposals for Re-thinking the
Foundations of the Cuban Press" ("Propuestas para una refundacion de la
prensa cubana"), the article, published in the journal's regular Dossier
column, gathers comments from important personalities working or somehow
involved in journalism on the island. Below are some extremely eloquent
comments which aim to diagnose some of the problems in the sector,
including the name of the personality:

"Regrettably, our press continues to be sustained by an information
monopoly and the impunity that this situation grants its authors."
(Esteban Morales)

"(…) the perception that the Soviet press, freed from State control,
contributed to the collapse of that socialist system which, despite some
positive achievements, had, as we know, very little to do with the
thought of Marx and Lenin, is a threat that hangs over the censors'
heads," and, in connection with State bureaucracy and its fears: "the
fear that the press inspires in State structures is a pragmatic concern:
the press uncovers things, the press publicly condemns errors and
errata." (Luis Sexto)

"The Cuban press got stuck in time. In political terms, it is as though,
in its eyes, nothing has transpired over the last twenty years." (Jorge
Gomez Barata)

"The Cuban press does not believe that there can be more than one point
of view about something, it believes there is only one, correct point of
view (…) The realm and audience of Cuban journalism is old age…its way
of addressing the public, the news it finds interesting and its use of
language is not in step with our times, with the lives of people today."
(Justo Planas)

"We need a press that prevents disagreeable surprises that overwhelm us
(something along the lines of falling flat on one's face, when were are
unexpectedly surprised by something we ought to have known) and the
confusion when faced with false values." "A new press ought to break all
ties that have it administrated exclusively by the Ideology Department
of Cuba's Communist Party." (Aurelio Alonso)

I'll put an end to what could well become a very long list of
quotations, and ask: did the gathering organized by UPEC raise any hopes
regarding changes that could address the problems mentioned above? The
answer is no.

It is said President Raul Castro's remarks sent to the congress met with
much approval. It would certainly not be the first time the president
makes his critical and very realistic assessments known to the public.
Unfortunately, many of these criticisms remain merely that.

We know enough about Molto, Arleen and Aixia – to mention three of the
better known figures who have become the new leaders of this
journalist's organization – to be able to predict that nothing will
change in the postures that they have maintained to date.

Journalist Oscar Sanchez Sierra's remarks – rather vague, to be sure –
are the only comments one can salvage from the reports on the congress'
closing session published in Granma a collection of paragraphs devoid of
any concrete observation: "We need to create our own journalistic
agenda. We can't continue to wait for this agenda to be handed down from
the top or be decided externally. We must stop being mere executors of
instructions and start acting like thinking beings."

A highly professional journalist who has lived in Cuba for many years,
Fernando Ravsberg, also contributed ideas to the debate surrounding the
Cuban press, from the privileged position of someone who follows the
baseball match from the stands.

In his article "Cuba: The Press within the Press" ("Cuba: la prensa en
la prensa"), published by Espacio Laical, he writes: "Except in
emergency situations, the Cuban press plays, not an informational, but
rather a propagandistic role. Nothing has benefited the press of the
Cuban émigré community than the straightjacket that prevents Cuban
journalists [on the island] from reporting on politically thorny issues
in a timely fashion. Newspaper editors wait from a sign from above every
time a delicate issue comes up."

Unless the many problems addressed above, problems that are well known
by most and talked about in parks and at home by most Cubans, begin to
be tackled head-on, no change of any real significance should be
expected now, after UPEC's Ninth Congress has come to an end.

Big Brother is still watching us, omnipresent and omnipotent. Cuban
journalists will, it seems, continue to look towards their team bench,
waiting, as baseball players do, for the last sign from the coach before
trying to hit the ball at the decisive moments of the game.

Vicente Morín Aguado morfamily@correodecuba.cu

Source: "Cuba's official journalists back the status quo" -
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=96509

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