Fidel Castro warns of harassment on Cuban Olympic team

by rahul | August 1, 2008 at 05:30 pm
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Cuban TV shows first images of ailing Castro

Cuban TV shows first images of ailing Castro

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This time, Fidel Castro has devoted one of his weekly reflections on the Cuban Olympic team and all the difficulties they have endured and the luring dangers ahead. Had there not been an US embargo on Cuba, one could take a rather dim look at his reflections. 

Reflections of Fidel

The harassed team

THE Olympics will very soon begin in China.  Some days ago I wrote about our baseball team.  I said that our athletes were going through a very hard test and that if something went wrong they were not the ones who deserved the harshest criticisms. I recognized their quality and patriotism. They felt depressed after the criticisms that came from Cuba.

Afterwards I heard that they were all in good spirits. They had learned how to eat the spicy Korean food with chopsticks, the way it is done in eastern Asia.  On July 26 they sent a vibrant patriotic message. They will no doubt face with honor that difficult test.

But, will they be on an equal footing with regards to the teams of other rich powers, such as the United States and Japan, which will be competing against Cuba?

The first has almost 30 times as many inhabitants as Cuba; the second, at least 11 times as many.  Neither of them is under any economic blockade and both are extremely wealthy.  No one is robbing or plundering them of their athletes.

Japan has ordered its professional athletes to join the Olympic team, and they will have to; that is the will of their masters. That has nothing to do with athletes who have been turned into merchandise.

On the eve of the Olympics, the United States, with its mercenary money, bought Alexei Ramírez, who was the home run champion of the National Baseball Series in our country in 2007. The coach of the team that bought him has boasted that he does not know in what base he should place Ramírez, because he is well trained in all of them. It is disgusting to read about the details of the commercial arrangements surrounding the case, which have been disseminated by the cables, regarding the distribution of the money.  Prior to this, they had bought the most promising pitcher from the province of Pinar del Rio, José Ariel Contreras, thus creating uncertainty and mistrust.

In Edmonton, Canada, just before the beginning of a match with the team of the host country at the 23rd World Youth Baseball Championship, we learned of the absence of southpaw Noel Argüelles, who would for sure be the starting pitcher of the game, and shortstop José Antonio Iglesias, with a batting average above 500.

The courageous youth league pitcher from Pinar del Río, Julio Alfredo Martínez Wong, went onto the mound. He had already pitched for eight innings in a row and had one more out; there were men on the bases and he looked exhausted.  In the bullpen, Joan Socarrás Maya was warming up hard; he was instructed to be ready to take action.  Esteban Lombillo, the energetic and able coach of Cuba’s youth team had already been to the box. Julio Alfredo, exploding with dignity, demanded that he be allowed to continue pitching: “I will finish this game!” –he exclaimed. Lombillo, who was also upset about the despicable betrayal, knew what he meant and trusted him.  Julio Alfredo put his heart and soul into the game.  He pitched for the last out of the eighth inning.  In the ninth he struck out three consecutive batters and beat the Canadian team by one run.

The substitute shortstop, Yandy Díaz, played wonderfully and connected a double that was decisive for Cuba’s victory.

Edmonton has become a garbage dump. The Cuban athletes were not well looked after. That city has the privilege of hosting that championship every year.  We should analyze whether it is worth attending that tournament.  Not even a single representative of the Cuban press had been sent to cover the event.  All we know we have learned through unofficial channels.

 The proud Cuban athletes of the Olympic baseball team, who have been wonderfully taken care of by their Korean hosts and will be even better taken care of in China, will have to compete under the unfavorable circumstances that I explained before.  Whatever the results, they know that what really matters for us are the honor and the courage with which they struggle.

But the imperialist aggression is not only seen in baseball.  Some months ago, part of our male soccer team let itself be drawn into an act of betrayal inside the United States, which limited Cuba’s prospects in that sport in the international arena. A female Olympic judo athlete, almost a sure gold medalist, was bribed.  In buying our athletes, they deprived us of five certain gold medals in Olympic boxing. It is like a call to destroy Cuba by stealing brains, muscle and bones.

Why are the rich and powerful afraid of our small and blockaded island?

In chess, Leinier Domínguez is fighting in Switzerland at one of the most important international tournaments.

At the Olympics, due to begin on August 8, our athletes in different sports will fight for the gold with more dignity than ever, and our people will enjoy their gold medals as they never have.  Then the fanatics will remember the traitors.

 

 Fidel Castro Ruz

July 31, 2008
12:32 p.m.

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Criticom

I would love to see Castro's reflections on that:

So far the archive has catalogued the deaths of 9,240 victims of the Castro regime. Who were they? Sister Aida Rosa Pérez, who was sent to prison as an "enemy of the revolution" and died of heart failure brought on by torture and hard labor. Estanislao González Quintana, who died in police custody four days after being detained for "unlawful economic activity"; his corpse was visibly bruised and had a deep gash in the forehead. The three García-Marin Thompson brothers, who sought asylum at the Vatican embassy in Havana, only to be seized by Interior Ministry troops and executed after a summary hearing. Mrs. Alberto Lazo Pastrana, who died with her three children when the boat on which they were trying to leave Cuba was sunk by the Cuban navy.

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mpress

Criticom leftist know Fidel is a murdering tyrant and his Island is a prison for the average Cuban and a whorehouse for rich Europeans and Canadians..but they still love him, like Che they are the lefts romantic vision of themselves. And why do people blame the US embargo! If I remember Fidel sided with the Soviets, why should the US be blamed for the failure of Communism.  The Soviets seem to have escaped any blame for their hand in the destruction of Cuba. Don't blame the US for the failure of the system you know is a failure. Try putting the blame where it belongs for a change. Maybe with all that natural gas money the Soviets can lend Cuba some money instead of begging America for help and at the same time giving us the finger. And I have family in Cuba but we have our own ways of helping them without helping Fidel..

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rahul

Cubana Flight 455 was a Cubana flight from Cuba to Barbados that was brought down by a terrorist attack on October 6, 1976. All 73 people on board the Douglas DC-8 aircraft were killed in what was then the most deadly terrorist attack in the Western hemisphere. Two time bombs were used, variously described as dynamite or C-4. Evidence implicated several CIA-linked anti-Castro Cuban exiles and members of the Venezuelan secret police DISIP. Political complications quickly arose when Cuba accused the US government of being an accomplice to the attack. CIA documents released in 2005 indicate that the agency "had concrete advance intelligence, as early as June 1976, on plans by Cuban exile terrorist groups to bomb a Cubana airliner." Posada Carriles denies involvement but provides many details of the incident in his book "Caminos del Guerrero" (Way of the Warrior),[1][2] Four men were arrested in connection with the bombing and a trial was held in Venezuela: Freddy Lugo and Hernan Ricardo Lozano were sentenced to 20-year prison terms; Orlando Bosch was acquitted because of technical defects in the prosecution evidence, and now lives in Miami, Florida; and Luis Posada Carriles was held for eight years while awaiting a final sentence, but eventually fled. He later entered the United States, where he was held on charges of entering the country illegally but was released on April 19, 2007.

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Criticom

Look at this video

0
rahul

And...All 48 passengers and 25 crew aboard the plane died: 57 Cubans, 11 Guyanese, and five North Koreans. Among the dead were all 24 members of the 1975 national Cuban Fencing team that had just won all the gold medals in the Central American and Caribbean Championship; many were teenagers.

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Criticom

Still, Fidel is a murder.

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mpress

Rahul do you admire Fidel Castro?

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mpress

First wikipedia is already a discredited site, second it will be like 300 full 747's crashing into the ocean to count for half of all the Cubans Fidel and his buddies have murdered in the last 50 years..so the numbers game will not work.

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Criticom
"The Castro regime executed more people in just its first three years than the Pinochet regime killed or 'disappeared' in its entire 17 years in power,"
mpress
mpress
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 18:54 on August 1st, 2008

Fidel if he is not totally senile should worry about his team not defecting in China to an embassy that will protect the athletes because most of them are dying to get out of Cuba.


Caoimhin1
Caoimhin1
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 22:34 on August 1st, 2008

rahul, I like this story. It's good stuff.

RobertVance
RobertVance
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 04:17 on August 2nd, 2008

rahul, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Since Beijing is hosting the Olympic Games, I don't see why Havana shouldn't be next in line. After all, one totalitarian country is as good as another, right?

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