[Politics_CurrentEvents_Group] The international slave trade: selling doctors and nurses for guns, oil and hard currency

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

 

Castro's Medical Mercenaries 
Susan Kitchens, 11.14.05 


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While clinics crumble at home, bereft Cuban doctors are dispatched on El Jefe's goodwill missions. But their purpose, it turns out, is more than just charity care.

At 4 A.M., hours before a pink sun would climb above the hills near Harare, Zimbabwe's capital, Leonel Córdova was jerked awake. "Get up! Get up, now!" screamed the figure bursting through the door. Córdova, a doctor from Cuba, sat up on the couch. A policeman from the brutish African state, muscles bulging under his jacket and khaki-colored trousers, towered over the medic, pointing a gun barrel in his face. Córdova could hardly breathe. There was at least one other cop in the small, dark room now, with a gun trained on another Cuban, a dentist named Noris Peña. 

The two Cubans had committed a potential act of treason: Though promised to faltering Zimbabwe on behalf of the Cuban government, they had left the mission days earlier, escaping to a local's home. That morning, with the door flung open in the predawn chill, Peña shivered in her T shirt and shorts. Her heart pounded as the cops steadied their guns and then motioned for the two to get into a waiting jeep. "I felt like we were going to die," she recalls, five years later. 

Córdova, 36, and Peña, 30, are two of at least 60,000 Cubans who have, for decades, been dispatched as part of what Fidel Castro terms his "humanitarian medical missions." Of late this effort has grown more pointed, with new medical degrees being churned out and ever more doctors, nurses and dentists dispatched abroad--even as the state of care in Cuba itself deteriorates. What is El Jefe up to? 

Few of the médicos see as much drama as Córdova and Peña did. Most quietly complete multiyear stints, sometimes in remote regions, in dozens of countries in Africa, Latin America and parts of Asia. They then return home, many times to even more poorly equipped hospitals and clinics in Cuba. 

But a disturbing picture emerges from the ranks of those who, like Córdova and Peña, never go back. These two "deserters," as Cuba labels them, ultimately managed to slip to freedom, joining perhaps hundreds of others who've taken refuge in Canada, the U.S. or Europe. Most don't want to be located or identified, preferring not to bring further trouble onto themselves or family still in Cuba. FORBES interviewed nine. 

Castro dispatched his first medical brigade to Algeria in 1963 and has since boasted that in spite of a U.S. trade embargo Cuba managed to provide these trained missionaries to the world. He delighted in offering 1,500 doctors to help America deal with Hurricane Katrina. (Washington said it didn't need the help.) 

The Cuban missions have multiple aims. At some level, certainly in the minds of the medics themselves, this is humanitarianism. It is also a chance to practice their field with resources absent at home. 

But for the Castro regime there are geopolitical and financial objectives. Shipping out the doctors bolsters support for Cuba in international circles such as the United Nations, where it faces periodic human-rights censure. And extending social services to the poor assists ideologically aligned despots like Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe and Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, which has the largest Cuban contingent, some 22,000 at last count. 

Physicians have been diverted to presidential palaces in the cases of the ailing, 81-year-old Mugabe and onetime Sandinista boss Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua, according to Alcibiades Hidalgo, a ranking Cuban government official who defected to the U.S. in 2002. Saddam Hussein was treated for a spinal tumor by at least one Cuban surgeon while ruling Iraq, Hidalgo has written. 

And then there's the money: Castro's doctors help to keep the Cuban regime equipped with hard currency. While a number of the destination countries are destitute, others make cash or in-kind payments to Cuba, and Castro maintains a firm grip on such inflow, say those who study Cuba's economy. 

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