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Friday, August 31, 2018

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Voice Of The Copts

Voice of the Copts, a nonprofit organization, fights the spread of Islamic supremacy and Sharia throughout the Western world through education, advocacy and action. By drawing attention to the suffering of Coptic Christians in Egypt, it endeavors to educate the Western world as to the chilling effect of Sharia (Islamic law). Founded in 2007 by Dr. Ashraf Ramelah, Voice of the Copts focuses on three key issues: freedom of religion, cultural identity and women’s rights.

Dear Friends of Voice of the Copts:
 Please join me tonight (8-28-18) at 7 PM NYC time for a live TV broadcast interview on the NYC Live 7 PM Shannon Taylor Show. 
Streaming live internationally: Live NYYNY Fios 34 SPECTRUM 56 RCN 83 
Hear the latest information about the Coptic Christian struggle in Egypt and their exodus to the West. 
Get an update on the La Casa Futura project!  
 
La Casa Futura project currently consists of one dormitory building providing help for up to 100 youths per session. Each session provides language learning, job direction, and cultural understanding. LCF is in its initial stage of development as we seek financial backers and matching funds for individual donations.
 
 
Link for previous stories:
 
 

For more information regarding Voice of the Copts please visit: 
To schedule Ashraf Ramelah for an interview, please write to: 
P.S. Your support is meaningful, impactful and potentially will save the lives of Christians around the world living under persecution.

 
Dr. Ashraf Ramelah is the founder and president of Voice of the Copts, a human rights nonprofit organization 501 (c) (3). The organization has offices in Italy and the United States.
Dr. Ramelah is dedicated to the Coptic cause and believes that his life’s mission is to speak up for the oppressed Copts who cannot speak up for themselves.
Dr. Ramelah is well known to the Egyptian government due to his advocacy for the Egyptian Copts as well as for Voice of the Copts’ lawsuit against them on behalf of Muslim convert to Christianity Mr. Hegazy and his family in 2009-2010. Ashraf Ramelah also appears as an entry in the Coptic History Encyclopedia (http://www.coptichistory.org/new_page_5260.htm).
Dr. Ramelah, himself a Copt, was born in Cairo, Egypt. At the age of 17, he travelled to Italy to study architecture. He graduated with a doctorate in architecture from La Sapienza – Universita’ Degli Studi di Roma,Italy. His special study is restoration of old monuments and history of architecture.
His career as an architect took him to work and live in Italy, Saudi Arabia, Gabon and the USA. His personal interests are Egyptology and Coptic history in the period after the Arab invasion of Egypt in 651 AD.
Voice of the Copts is dedicated to bringing fair, correct and balanced information to the entire world regarding Copts and Christians in countries with an Arab-Muslim majority.

 
La Casa Futura: Achieving independence for Egyptian youths in the freedom of the West
Rome, Italy. -– a Voice of the Copts’ project
La Casa Futura assists refugee youths fleeing from Egypt due to religious persecution. La Casa Futura is a two-year assimilation program in a residence building for young men and women (ages 15-20 years old) coming from Italian refugee camps. Language classes, vocational training and assistance for legal status in Italy are provided.

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Issue 141 - Cuba’s Bizarre Soft Power


the AZEL

PERSPECTIVE

Commentary on Cuba's Future, U.S. Foreign Policy & Individual Freedoms - Issue 141
 

Cuba’s Bizarre Soft Power

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Hard and soft powers are two types of foreign policy tools that nations use to exert influence in their relations with other countries. Hard power, the predominant tool and measure of a nation’s power, involves the use of military and economic clout to influence the political behavior of other nations. Hard power is a coercive approach to international relations which Harvard University professor Joseph Nye describes as “the ability to use the carrots and stick of economic and military might to make others follow your will.”
Hard power relies on the quantity and quality of a country’s resources:  its population, territory, military strength, economic power and natural resources. Hard power focuses on the threat or use of force, or economic means to achieve political goals.

In contrast, soft power, a term coined by Professor Nye, denotes the ability to shape the preferences of other nations through co-optive appeal rather than through coercion. Soft power relies on affinities in culture, politics, values, or foreign policies. According to Nye, “A country may obtain the outcomes it wants in world politics because other countries—admiring its values, emulating its example, aspiring to its level of prosperity and openness—want to follow it.”

Cuba, since its 1959 Cuban Revolution, has exercised hard and soft power worldwide disproportionately in excess of its resources and capabilities.

In the 1960s, 70s, and 80s, with the support of the Soviet Union, Cuba exported its brand of military revolution throughout the developing world to foment and aid Marxist uprisings.

As early as 1961, Cuba introduced military advisors in Africa, and in 1965 Che Guevara was sent to train and lead an insurgency in the Congo. The uprising failed, but two years later Guevara was again active in Bolivia, where he was captured and executed.

Cuban elements were also involved in the Vietnam War reportedly with an engineering battalion that maintained a major enemy supply line into South Vietnam. Brutal Cuban interrogators also worked in prisons in Hanoi.

The Cuban military also joined Syria and Egypt in their 1973 surprise invasion of Israel. The Castro government dispatched 4,000 combat troops along with tank elements to fight against Israel.

In 1975, Cuba launched a large-scale military intervention in support of the People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola with more than 25,000 troops.

In 1977, the Castros dispatched 15,000 Cuban troops along with armored vehicles, and artillery to help Ethiopia’s ruling party in its conflict with Somalia over the disputed Ogaden region.

Cuban troops intervened in Angola once again in 1988. This time troop levels reached 55,000 and included MIG-23 fighter-bombers with Cuban forces fighting South African forces in intense conventional combat.

To this we can add extensive incursions by Cuban operatives in the Caribbean and Latin America and the current massive deployment of Cuban personnel in Venezuela.

To fully appreciate the disproportionality of this use of hard power consider at what cost Cuba, with a population of eleven million and a GDP per capita 100th in world rankings, has maintained this level of military interventionism for six decades. For reference, the Unites States’ 2003 invasion of Iraq, consisting of 21 days of major combat operations, is estimated to have cost the U.S. economy over two trillion dollars.
 
But the most bizarre aspect of Cuba’s foreign policy is its highly successful projection of soft power which continues to this day.

Cuba presents a discredited ideology and a bankrupt economy. The Cuban revolution transformed, what in 1958 was one of the most prosperous countries in Latin America, into an enormously repressive and pauperized dysfunctional state from where 20% of the population has fled. According to the “Freedom in the World” report, Cuba scores in the worst-of-the-worst categories for political rights and civil liberties. The regime possesses none of the virtues of soft power.   Socioeconomically, Cuba offers nothing to emulate, admire or aspire to. Discredited Cuba should not be able to exercise any soft power.

And yet, we constantly witness support for the Cuban government in international forums, and the sickening, incomprehensive sycophancy of world leaders towards the Cuban leadership. This perversion is about the only success of the Cuban Revolution.

Please let us know if you Like Issue 141 - Cuba’s Bizarre Soft Power on Facebook this article.
We welcome your feedback.
Abrazos,
 
Lily & José
 
(click on the name to email Lily or Jose)
This article was originally published in English in the Miami Herald and in Spanish in El Nuevo Herald.
 
José Azel, Ph.D.
José Azel left Cuba in 1961 as a 13 year-old political exile in what has been dubbed Operation Pedro Pan - the largest unaccompanied child refugee movement in the history of the Western Hemisphere.

He is currently dedicated to the in-depth analyses of Cuba's economic, social and political state, with a keen interest in post-Castro-Cuba strategies. Formerly, a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies (ICCAS) at the University of Miami, Jose Azel has published extensively on Cuba related topics.

In 2012 and 2015, Dr. Azel testified in the U.S. Congress on U.S.-Cuba Policy, and U.S. National Security.  He is a frequent speaker and commentator on these and related topics on local, national and international media.  He holds undergraduate and masters degrees in business administration and a Ph.D. in International Affairs from the University of Miami.

José along with his wife Lily are avid skiers and adventure travelers.  In recent years they have climbed Grand Teton in Wyoming, trekked Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and Machu Pichu in Peru.  They have also hiked in Tibet and in the Himalayas to Mt. Everest Base Camp.

They cycled St. James Way (
El Camino de Santiago de Compostela) and cycled alongside the Danube from Germany to Hungary. They have scuba dived in the Bay Islands off the Honduran coast.

Their adventurers are normally dedicated to raise funds for causes that are dear to them. 
Watch Joe & Lily summit Kilimanjaro.

Books by Dr. José Azel
In Reflections on FreedomJosé Azel brings together a collection of his columns published in prestigious newspapers.  Each article reveals his heartfelt and personal awareness of the importance of freedom in our lives.  They are his reflections after nearly sixty years of living and learning as a Cuban outside Cuba. In what has become his stylistic trademark, Professor Azel brilliantly introduces complex topics in brief journalistic articles.
Buy Now
En Reflexiones sobre la libertad José Azel reúne una colección de sus columnas publicadas en prestigiosos periódicos. Cada artículo revela su percepción sincera y personal de la importancia de la libertad en nuestras vidas. Son sus reflexiones después de casi sesenta años viviendo y aprendiendo como cubano fuera de Cuba.  En lo que ha resultado ser característica distintiva de sus artículos, el Profesor Azel introduce con brillantez complejos temas en  breves artículos de carácter periodístico.
Compre Aqui
Mañana in Cuba is a comprehensive analysis of contemporary Cuba with an incisive perspective of the Cuban frame of mind and its relevancy for Cuba's future.
Buy now

 
Pedazos y Vacíos is a collection of poems written in by Dr. Azel in his youth. Poems are in Spanish.
Buy now
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Monday, August 27, 2018

Wake Up





 They have become outright brazen and determined to impeach an innocent man, not due to any patriotism, love for country, flag or our Constitution, but their motives are to perpetuate themselves in power… 

 The crimes they have committed, once in total authority, will permit them to elude justice, and worse yet, commit more acts of malfeasance than ever with total impunity… 

 The Democrat Party has cease to exist, terrorist have taken over the organization, with the endorsement of its leadership,  and, knowingly, in total agreement with the implementation of their evil precept.

Eduardo E. Rodriguez 

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Cuba: extrajudicial killings

Ver versión en español abajo.

Persistent extrajudicial killings of prisoners in Cuba

 
On August 9, 2018, 46 year-old Alejandro Pupo Echemendía was murdered by prison guards at a police station in Placetas, Villa Clara province. He had been arrested two days earlier on charges of illicit horse racing. According to a fellow detainee, he was having a nervous breakdown when a police officer handcuffed him and several policemen proceeded to beat him with nightsticks and clubs and kicked him, throwing him to the groundPrison authorities fetched the lifeless body only after fellow detainees complained. Taken to a hospital, Pupo was pronounced dead. The family insisted on viewing the body and saw multiple signs of trauma. The funeral was held with heavy police presence and several human rights’ activists who tried to attend were turned away.

A fellow detainee who witnessed the killing, Abel Santiago Tamayo, and members of the victim’s family denounced the assassination through Jorge Luis García Pérez, known as Antúnez, a leading human rights’ activist from Placetas. Antúnez posted on social media the video of Santiago’s testimony and those of the wife, niece, nephew, and sister of the victim as well as photos of the body showing an injury in one arm and large bruises on the back and all over the body (see some above).

The tip of the iceberg 
This case is remarkable in that it was promptly reported on filmed accounts of an eyewitness and family members of the victim that were quickly disseminated on social media. Also, these brave people are publicly denouncing the authorities’ efforts to silence them. Sadly, it is a telling glimpse of the systematic slaughter occurring in Cuba’s dungeons for almost six decades.

Despite limited information and resources, Cuba Archive has documented deaths in prison or detention during the current Cuban regime that include the following 950 cases: 509 extrajudicial killings22 deaths in hunger strikes312 deaths from medical negligence/health reasons, and 107 suicides/alleged suicides (many might actually have been extrajudicial killings). The tally includes women and minors. Details and sources of the information on each of all these cases may be viewed at database.CubaArchive.org, although these records are grossly insufficient in conveying the grave injustices and human suffering behind each of those stories.  (Cuba Archive documents the deaths of all persons held for any cause due to the absence of due process guarantees and the systematic violation of their rights, recognized in international instruments the Cuban state has ratified.)



The vast majority of deaths in the prisons are not reported but are estimated in the hundreds a year. Conditions are appalling and the treatment barbaric, monitoring and inspections by independent human rights’ organizations are not allowed, eyewitnesses and families of victims are silenced, and human rights’ defenders are persecuted. The number of prison facilities in Cuba is a secret and there are no well-informed estimates of the prison population, however, there are credible reports that the prison population is enormous and could be among the highest in the world per capita. An estimated five hundred facilities include well-known prisons as well as labor camps, correctional installations, and specialized facilities for minors, prostitutes, the military, persons with HIV/AIDS, etc. At least 120 prisoners are known to be held for outright political causes, but thousands are held nationwide for pre-criminal “social dangerousness” -the alleged propensity to attempt against “socialist morals”- and for an assortment of “crimes” that are an aberration in civilized societies and are used to exert socio-political control, repress independent economic activity, and punish political opponents or dissenters.

Silencing the witnesses
Cuba’s State Security is embarked on a frantic campaign of threats and intimidation to cover up the murder of Alejandro Pupo. On August 21st, Abel Santiago Tamayo, the eyewitness to Alejandro Pupo’s murder by Placetas police, was threatened by authorities and forced to claim on video that he had been manipulated. But, he did not take back his account and later explained (also on video) that State Security had taken him to a safe house to make him recant. On August 22nd, Pupo’s niece and her husband were detained, threatened by State Security, and forced her to accuse  Antúnez on video of manipulating them for profit. Their 4-year old child was pushed and scratched during their arrest; the boy was left traumatized by the altercation. Since the assassination, several human rights’ defenders from Placetas, including Antúnez, Arianna López Roque, and Loreto Hernández García, are being harassed and threatened by authorities. Alexei Mora Montalvo was arrested on August 25th and there is currently no information of his whereabouts. Other attempts to confuse public opinion, such as the fake mass emailing of videos of witness denials, are sloppy.


Children are also victims 
That Cuban authorities abuse even children when arresting or threatening their parents is not new; there are many accounts of such incidents. The case of Daniela Ramón Rodríguez, age 4, is particularly sad. She died March 26, 2013 at the Juan Manuel Márquez Hospital of Havana after a health crisis triggered by police mistreatment. The little girl had a serious cardiac condition that had required open-heart surgery (congenital cardiopathy, enlarged heart, and aggressive pericarditis). She had been detained with her parents and denied food and medicine for hours before being handed to her grandfather. The police ignored her parents’ plights and threatened and offended them in front of their daughter, pressuring them to sign a confession of having committed a robbery with violence, which they refused. Two days after the traumatic event, Daniela’s health took a sudden downturn; she was placed in intensive care and died two months later. No evidence was presented backing the accusations and the parents insisted on their innocence, but the father was imprisoned and the mother released four days after the arrest only having posted a five hundred peso bail (more than the average monthly salary).

Countless children in Cuba are separated from parents imprisoned for years on all sorts of oppressive or trumped-up charges. Many have been attacked with their families -some even murdered- by Border Guards, police, State Security agents, or revolutionary mobs and others are held hostage as their parents are exploited as temporary workers overseas and may not see them for years if they leave their missions.

This is the Cuba hidden from the world that we must continue to report on.
 
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