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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Fidel Suarez Cruz

Interviewed November 22, 2024

The Cuban regime is paternalistic. The fathers are Fidel and Raúl Castro. [Fidel Castro (1926 – ) led the Cuban Revolution and seized power in 1959. He established a brutal communist dictatorship in Cuba and led the country until 2008. Raul Castro (1931 – ) is the younger brother of Fidel. He assumed leadership of the Communist Party and the country in 2008.]

I emphasize that it is a tyranny and not a government because the people did not elect it. When there is a system of terror that is implemented for many years and it embraces and copies so many regimes of terror, you see almost totalitarian support for the regime. But as I said, the population responds to that terror, to manipulation, to the hatred, to not take issue with the revolution. To take issue with the revolution means going to prison. No one wants to be imprisoned, especially because of the conditions experienced within the Cuban prisons. So, the people – not all, but the majority – prefers to live in submission and abide in silence.

When Raúl [Castro] was handed control over the “fiefdom”, which is what I call Cuba… Since he was handed the land – because they give themselves the right to say that Cuba is their property – there has been no change. What there have been are strategic changes which are cosmetic — superficial. No tyrant will hand over power. That’s a fantasy.

Like Fidel, Raúl Castro wants to die in office, but giving the appearance that there have been changes in Cuba. But changes must start from the bottom up. They are not willing to face an international tribunal to be tried for crimes against humanity. They cannot accept it and I understand.They are too cowardly and abusive to face justice.

For people who say that in Cuba there have been changes in Raúl Castro’s era, for me it is totally false.

The right to leave and enter the country is a right that they have withheld for nearly 45 years. It is a right that they withheld and now, like a crumb, they are offering it. The majority of the world’s countries, not to say all, enjoy that right. That is why it is not change. It is a gift in exchange for submission. And for the many who come here [outside Cuba] to support the regime by saying that in Cuba, in Raúl Castro’s era, there are changes: there cannot be change while a totalitarian system exists. There must be changes from the bottom up. The change will be made by the peaceful opposition, leading for the Cuban people, for those who really want change.