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2. SPECIFIC PRESS LAWS
There is no press law in Cuba. The role and duties of the press
are spelled out in the Communist Party of Cuba?s Program Platform
and the resolution approved at the Party?s 1st Congress (1975) concerning
mass media, in which the function of the press is set out. These
regulations were then ratified in the Communist Party Program (1986)
and in resolutions on ideology approved at party Congresses since
then.
In 1997, the Cuban government passed Resolution Nº 44/97 regulating
foreign press activities in Cuba. The resolution states that ?the
International Press Center (CPI) is under the direction of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs which has legal jurisdiction to deal with anything
to do with the foreign press.?
This resolution limits the work of the foreign press ? Cuban
journalists could no longer be correspondents and would have to
be paid in pesos, news reports could no longer be filed to various
media, it would no longer be possible to send photographs or videotapes
with airline passengers or crew, and taxes and customs duties would
henceforth be payable.
In Article 3, the resolution states that a correspondent ?must
show objectivity in his professional work, sticking strictly to
the facts, in line with the ethical principles that govern the practice
of journalism.?
It warns: ?In the event of non-compliance, the CPI may issue
a warning or temporarily or permanently withdraw accreditation,
depending on the circumstances and the consequences of the offense
committed.?
Article 7 states that ?in cases of natural catastrophes and
contingencies affecting the country, the foreign press must observe
the orders and measures that are put into effect under such circumstances.?
It also warns that no correspondent shall without CPI?s knowledge
provide information to another news medium or colleague that asks
for it from abroad. To re-accredit a correspondent, the CPI may
require ?evidence of published work.?
The resolution, which consists of three chapters and 27 articles,
stipulates that no news agency may directly hire a Cuban journalist
as a stringer, but do so only through a ?state agency.? Such a correspondent,
by interpretation, would be subject to the whims of an official
intermediary ? something contrary to press freedom.
The powers granted to the CPI allow the government to have
control over press activities through third parties ? a useful way
of dodging direct responsibility in the world?s eyes for any arbitrary
decision that may be imposed.
The International Press Center processes and issues work permits
to journalists and temporarily or permanently withdraws them from
those who fail to comply with the official regulations. In this
way, the Center is given powers akin to those of the immigration
authority, with the corresponding linkage to the Interior Ministry
that this implies.
The IAPA Press Freedom Committee?s report on Cuba in 1998 says
that in less than one year the Cuban authorities denied entry visas
to 80 professional journalists on the pretext that they had ?engaged
in coverage critical of the government.?
Resolution Nº 44/97 was issued in response to a need to control
coverage by the international press of the Pope?s visit to Cuba
in January 1998. An appearance of an opening up had previously been
given by authorizing CNN to open a bureau in Havana.
Law 80, enacted on December 26, 1997, with the name ?Law of
Reaffirmation of National Dignity and Sovereignty,? says in article
8 that ?the full weight of the law shall fall on anyone who directly
or indirectly collaborates with enemy news media.? Transgressors
face three to 10 years? imprisonment. Referring to this law, Raúl
Rivero, editor of CubaPress and the IAPA?s delegate in Cuba, said,
?The problem is that under it, any news item or piece of information
that displeases the regime could be regarded as favoring the Helms-Burton
law (of the United States).?
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Copyright © 1999
Inter American Press Association. All rights reserved.
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