[Wow.  This administration will never cease to amaze me. --MS]


Miami Herald
May 17, 2000

PHOTO:

http://www.herald.com/content/archive/news/rafters99/docs2/060611.htm

Elian pictures anger exiles

Boy seen wearing communist symbol

BY MARIKA LYNCH AND FRANCES ROBLES
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

SAGA OF ELIAN

CLASSROOM: Elian sits in the front row, wearing the blue Pioneer scarf and
a white T-shirt with a picture of Cuban patriot Jose Marti.

The latest pictures of Elian Gonzalez showed the boy studying at the Wye
Plantation and playing an instrument typical in Caribbean bands. But what
angered Cuban Americans on Tuesday was the neckerchief the boy wore -- the
uniform for the Pioneers, the youth communist league.

Modeled after groups in the former Soviet Union, the Pioneers instill
communist ideals through songs, schedule weekend trips to help with
harvests in the countryside, and instruct children to repeat the group
allegiance ``Pioneers for communism, we will be like Che [Guevara].''

Membership is expected for Cuban children, who join in the first grade
and wear the Pioneers uniform to school. Parents of students who refuse
to enroll are ostracized, labeled counterrevolutionaries and denied
promotions at work, said Jaime Suchlicki, director of the University of
Miami's Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies. Pioneer members
also are instructed to tell on their parents if they make statements
against the revolution.

The pictures, released in the Cuban daily Granma, confirmed the worst
fears of many Cuban exiles, who believed the boy will be brainwashed by
the Cuban government as long as he is with his father.

``Is Elian in Cuba?'' a confused Gladys Chong asked, when her husband,
Ramon, burst through the door of their Southwest Miami-Dade home with
the news of the images.

``No,'' Ramon Chong, a security guard who came to the United States four
years ago, told her. ``It seems communism has penetrated the United
States.''

Gladys Chong, who wore the neckerchief in her youth, was shocked.

``They didn't even wait until he got to Cuba to start conditioning
him!'' said Gladys, a 44-year-old dental lab assistant.

The images also troubled Dr. Marta Molina, a psychologist who in her
20-year career in Cuba said she treated 500 children with problems she
said stemmed from communist indoctrination.

``The oppression has already started,'' Molina said.

The Pioneer uniform is part of a strategy to ensure the boy's return,
she said, by convincing Elian that he wants to return to Cuba so he will
tell the courts as much.

The boy's Miami relatives were so concerned that they will write a
letter to the Immigration and Naturalization Service to complain, said
Kendall Coffey, one of the family's attorneys. He said the INS has
shrugged off its responsibility for the boy since he was handed to his
father.

``We're very troubled,'' Coffey said. ``He's being paraded as a trophy
in the garb of the Communist Party. It's happening even more rapidly
than our worst expectations.''

The pictures, five in all, did not have captions explaining when they
were taken. One showed an indoor classroom scene, with Elian sitting in
the front row, wearing the blue Pioneer scarf and a white T-shirt with a
picture of Cuban patriot Jose Marti. Wearing the same outfit, he was
seen reading at a desk and being supervised by a woman, who presumably
was his teacher, Agueda Fleitas. In another close-up, Elian was
apparently in a music class playing claves, hardwood sticks that provide
a beat for Caribbean music.

The government agencies involved in Elian's case did not raise an
eyebrow over his new clothes. What Elian dons each day is up to his dad,
not the government, they said.

``It's not INS's business what Elian wears on a daily basis,'' INS
spokeswoman Maria Cardona said. ``Those are issues up to his father.''

Carole Florman, spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Justice, said the
same.

``I think it's his school uniform,'' Florman said. ``The other kids are
dressed that way, too. That's not something we're involved in. I don't
think it's an area under our control.''

Cuban diplomats said the gripe was just one of many coming from Miami
exiles.

``It's part of our system of children going to school,'' said Luis
Fernandez, spokesman for the Cuban Interests Section in Washington.
``It's normal. Children go to school in a uniform -- just the way they
do at private schools in the United States. I don't see what the problem
is.''

While Elian was in South Florida, Havana had complained that the boy's
Miami relatives had brainwashed him by sending him to Disney World and
keeping him in the company of exile activists.

In other developments, attorneys for Elian's Miami relatives said
Tuesday that the boy's father would be powerless to stop the communist
regime from sending the 6-year-old to work camps.

``Irrespective of [his father's] wishes, Elian will be doing
agricultural work such as cutting sugar cane in the fields, to further
indoctrinate him and separate him . . . for extended periods to break
down the bond between parent and child and cement the bond between child
and state,'' the attorneys wrote in court papers filed Tuesday.

In their 24-page filing, the attorneys asked the three federal appeals
judges presiding over Elian's case to reject an attempt by his Cuban
father to replace his Miami great-uncle as the adult who speaks for
Elian.

The filing was in response to a motion by Juan Miguel Gonzalez, who is
seeking to replace Lazaro Gonzalez as his son's representative.

In a separate 21-page filing, the U.S. Department of Justice urged the
appeals court judges in Atlanta to substitute Elian's father for his
great-uncle Lazaro Gonzalez, who filed the lawsuit aiming to force the
government to give the child a political asylum hearing.

If the court grants the motion, the father will be free to drop the suit
and return with Elian to Cuba.

And in Washington, 16 members of Congress led by Rep. Lincoln
Diaz-Balart, R-Miami, asked U.S. Inspector General Robert Ashbaugh to
investigate the April 22 raid during which the boy was taken from the
home of his Miami relatives. Herald translator Renato Perez and staff
writer Jay Weaver contributed to this report.

Copyright 2000 Miami Herald



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