Local leaders of Cuba’s Communist Party want to expel a prominent academic for an article decrying widespread corruption, but lower-ranking members have rejected the order pending an appeal, an associate of the writer said.
Esteban Morales, a historian who has long written on race and relations with the US, was ordered removed by a party committee in Havana’s Playa district, said Pedro Campos, a former Cuban diplomat who once worked as a researcher under Morales at the University of Havana’s Center for the Study of the United States.
However, grassroots party members in Playa said they considered the committee’s action too harsh and rejected it, and Morales said he would appeal the sanctions, Campos said.
Neither the party nor Morales has commented on the case and it was unclear if Morales has been formally removed from the party yet.
It was also not clear if the municipal committee was responding to complaints from higher levels or acting on its own. Municipal committees report to provincial committees, which are overseen by the powerful Central Committee that meets only behind closed doors.
Campos first posted word of action against Morales in an essay on kaosenlared.net, a left-leaning political Web site. In a subsequent phone interview, Campos confirmed the facts published online, but refused further comment.
He also described the effort to dismiss Morales from the Communist Party on the English-language Havana Times Web site.
He said he had known Morales since 1991 and described him as a committed communist.
At issue is an article Morales wrote in April that described corruption at the highest echelons of Cuba’s government — not the meddling of a few opposition activists — as the greatest threat to the country’s communist system.
Nearly as unusual as his public complaint was the fact that his essay was posted on the state-run Web site of the National Artists and Writers Union of Cuba. The article was removed a day after foreign media in Havana reported on it.
Morales’ essay crossed a number of red lines in tightly controlled Cuba, including openly discussing corruption rumors surrounding the recent dismissal of a top aviation official who had fought alongside Ernesto “Che” Guevara and Fidel and Raul Castro in the 1950s.
“There must be some truth to these reports, because this is a small country where everyone knows each other,” Morales wrote.
He also said some Cuban officials are preparing to divide the spoils if Cuba’s political system disintegrates, like the shadowy oligarchs who emerged from the collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990s.
“In reality, corruption is much more dangerous than so-called internal dissent,” he wrote. “The latter is isolated ... but corruption is truly counterrevolutionary because it comes from within the government and the state apparatus.”
Morales didn’t criticize the Castro brothers, but said cronyism was rampant.
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