Thursday 14 May 2015

Internet blogging in Cuba: A representation of Bloggers and their approaches to social transformation against censorship.

                                                                       Name: Konstantinos Zantes
                                                                       Student ID: s1238604

                                                                   Class: Censorship and social transformation
                                                                   Course: International Studies
                                                                       Word count:  3772



Internet blogging in Cuba: A representation of Bloggers and their approaches to social transformation against censorship.

Internet censorship in Cuba has been an important international concern for years. “The Cuban internet is considered to be one of the most tightly controlled in the world” (Voeux, 2006). In fact “ a special permit is required to use the Internet and all e-mails are intricately monitored” (Voeux, 2006). Therefore such an act is considered a violation of the freedom of speech rights. Such restriction in internet use and other aspects of life are due to the Cuban government, the US embargo and economic limitations. So it is not a surprise that Cuba is one of the most tightly controlled countries in the world. In addition, Cuba is considered by many a totalitarian state that according to the Freedom House, Cuba’s status on the net is “not free” (freedom house, 2013). “It is widely believed that the Internet poses an insurmountable threat to authoritarian rule” (Kalathil and Boas, 2001). Indeed, ever since the socialist uprising in Cuba under Fidel Castro, the Cuban government has become notorious for its severe and harsh political repression. “The government passed a law as soon as the Internet appeared in Cuba. Decree-Law 209, adopted in June 1996 and entitled ‘Access from the Republic of Cuba to the Global Computer Network,’ says that the Internet cannot be used ‘in violation of Cuban society’s moral principles or the country’s laws’ and that e-mail messages must not ‘jeopardise national security’ ” (Voeux, 2006). Such control on the internet translates into control of other aspects of the Cuban people’s daily life. “Although tourists are able to have fairly easy access to the internet through for example hotels, Cubans have to go to public internet cafes, where they first have to identify themselves (giving away their privacy) and have to wait up to 45 minutes in line to be able to access a computer” (Voeux, 2006). To receive a clearer picture of the amount of control that the Cuban government has over the internet, “the regime also ensures that there is no Internet access for its political opponents and independent journalists, for whom reaching news media abroad is an ordeal” (Voeux, 2006). “In Cuba, you can get a 20-year prison sentence for writing a few “counter-revolutionary” articles for foreign websites, and a five-year one just for connecting with the Internet in an illegal manner” (Voeux, 2006). Therefore, “Through a combination of reactive and proactive strategies, an authoritarian regime can counter the challenge posed by Internet use and even utilize the Internet to extend its reach and authority” (Kalathil and Boas, 2001). Fortunately there are some known Cuban dissident bloggers such as Elaine Diaz and her work “La Polemica Digital”, where she and her group are formulating an avenue for criticism in the country, that offers the public an alternative opinion. Also another renowned blogger is Yoani Sanchez with her work “Generation Y”, that aims for “liberating of the self from political process (Venegas, 2011). Furthermore the essay will explore the effects of government internet restriction on the politics and culture of Cuba. An emphasis on the blogs “La Polemica Digital” by Elaine Diaz and “Generation Y” by Yoani Sanchez will be made, since their works are the most influential and well known in Cuba. Such an analysis will present the attempts of Cuban citizen to cause a social transformation in Cuba as a liberalization of censorship.  This will offer insight on the effect of Cuban blogging between the relationship of the repressive government and the culture existent in Cuba.  The structure of the essay will involve, a theoretical framework, an analysis of the two bloggers, the relationship between blogging and the government, and a comparative case study with Chinese internet censorship. The research question to be answered in this essay is whether, the blogging dissidents in Cuba have brought social transformation in Cuba and to what extent.
Beginning with the theoretical framework, a lot of literature is existent upon the Cuban internet censorship and Cuban blogosphere. Such works offer indispensable insight upon the matters discussed in this essay. In her report “Going Online in Cuba : Internet under surveillance”, Claire Voeux elaborates on the authoritarian nature of the Cuban government and the censorship it applies on the internet. To clearly present her point, she states how “Political dissidents and independent journalists are not usually allowed into Internet cafes” (Voeux, 2006). This is one of the many actions that the government undertakes in order to consolidate its censorship of opposition in Cuba. Moreover Voeux explains the relationship between Cuba and China and how they exchange information and are attempting to negotiate. Also in “Freedom and exchange in communist Cuba” by Yoani Sanchez there is a blatant depiction of the lack of freedom for the people. This idea is reinforced by the quote “Fidel Castro’s socialist revolution promised to satisfy the basic needs of the Cuban people, but the price demanded was the surrender of freedoms” (Sanchez, 2010). Through this remark it becomes obvious how a lot of political dissidents feel about the regime.
The following piece of literature worthy of analysis is “Liberating the self: The biopolitics of Cuban blogging” by Venegas. Venegas clearly represents the political context of internet activism, more specifically in the realm of the Cuban blogosphere. She notes how the bloggers act upon the unfair restrictions they face daily due to the governmental actions and ideals. She further describes how blogging is a now acting as a tool to represent people’s identity in Cuba and to the world culture. Moreover,  Renee Timberlake suggests in her work “Cyberspace and the Defence of the Revolution: Cuban Bloggers, Civic Participation, and State Discourse” the difference between bloggers in Europe with bloggers in China, Iran and Cuba. For example she writes that “While a blogger in a liberal democratic country may freely partake in political discussions, bloggers in countries such as China, Iran, and Cuba are extraordinary in their determination to share their lived realities with the world despite limited access to the Internet, government censorship of certain websites, and fear of repercussions” (Timberlake, 2010).
Furthermore in the literature, “Literacy, Censorship and Intellectual Freedom: The Independent Library Movement in Contemporary Cuba” by Kelsey Vidaillet, looks at “what is the freedom of expression, freedom of information, intellectual freedom and censorship in Cuba” (Vidaillet, 2007). In addition she further elaborates on the practises of the government upon the Cuban people. The final, work worth noting is “From Cyberspace to Public Space? The Emergent Blogosphere and Cuban Civil Society” by Ted A. Henken and Sjamme van de Voort. It illustrates how famous blogs and bloggers have effectively become a vital part of Cuba’s expanding public sphere.
“The political debate in Cuba appears to be shifting away from the traditional spaces of public participation created by the state” (Fonseca, 2011). Therefore with the emergence of the internet and blogging, Boje in his work discusses how “with the advent of modernity (science, technology[…]), the mechanistic overtook the organic”. Cyber activism started to emerge as a new challenging practise to the state. However this would not go unnoticed by the government. This is because, “Government policies of the United States and Cuba transform the Cuban Internet into a rough and inaccessible space where it is nearly impossible to navigate without being co-opted by the Scylla of state capture or beholden to the Charibdis of foreign support” (Henken and Van de Voort, 2014). Indeed, both governments employed such policies on the internet in order to satisfy their own self interests in terms of geopolitical and strategic goals. Therefore it becomes an insurmountable task to become a revered blogger with the independence to write about any matter he or she chooses. Elain Diaz and Yoani Sanchez are two prominent examples of exceptions of people who managed to gain the freedom to advocate their opinions of day to day repression and censorship by the Cuban government.
Elaine Diaz is better known for her work “La Polemica Digital”, where she and her group are formulating an avenue for criticism in the country, that offers the public an alternative opinion. “A professor of journalism at the University of Havana, a public institution, Ms. Díaz is an employee of the state” (Ritter, 2013). “That has not stopped her from writing publicly and with disarming directness about the challenges of daily life in Cuba on her blog, La Polémica Digital, for the last five years” (Ritter, 2013). Ms Diaz has never been contacted by the authorities, showing signs of surprising tolerance from the government. Indeed few people are able to criticise the government without some form of intervention. For example, when Ms Diaz took her leave from the blogging due to her desire to focus on her teaching, “Cuba’s more famous and far more radical critic, Yoani Sánchez speculated that she had been forced off the keyboard by a government that had lost patience with her” (Ritter, 2013). Obviously she did not know then that Ms Diaz voluntarily left blogging for her own reasons, but this assumption clearly presents the repression and intervention that the Cuban government is willing to practise in order to remove any opposition. “The Cuban government, however, has increased the surveillance by the Cuban police on Sánchez, Diaz and fellow bloggers because of this, limiting ways for the bloggers to take their protests out on the streets” (Venegas, 2010). “This of course has increased the risk that comes along with the work they do, and many bloggers fear what could happen to them” (Venegas, 2010). Furthermore, Ms Diaz’s blog La Polémica Digital, offers accounts of everyday life and criticisms through her experiences in Cuba. She wants to offer a voice for the people and the government in an attempt to merge Cuban popular culture with the government’s actions in the hope that the two become more cohesive and united. Through projecting the complaints from her blog she can give people a greater understanding of the situation and a mentality of openness and freedom of speech in Cuba. Conversely she can act as a messenger of the people to the government thus giving them the people’s perspective on certain issues involving domestic and foreign policies. Such blogging is an indispensable source of progress in such a totalitarian state which has been internationally pressurized for years.
Another well-known Cuban blogger, Yoani Sanchez is perhaps the main provocateur and actor of defamation for the Cuban government. In her blog “Generation Y” which is defined as generation “I”, thus giving a meaning of individualist independence, she casts light upon the issues of repression on Cuban society. Venegas further analyses that Sanchez’s work presents a “mobilization of life forces within the ambivalent dynamics of  technological relation – one which sets the human up as co-emerging with machines, tools, and media environments.” (Venegas, 2011). Furthermore Sanchez, offers a creative and personal catharsis in her descriptions of everyday life and social repression in Cuba, starting from 2007. In the same year she would receive International recognition and feedback from her readers that introduced the international fan base she would eventually form. It is interesting to point out that Yoani Sanchez is more widely known around the world than in Cuba due to the censorship and lack of access of the internet. In 2008 due to the increase of political repression in Cuba, Sanchez had the idea of approaching the issue with a new strategy by taking part in the public action of “La Red Ciudadana” which aimed to bring power to civil society and to consolidate the ideals of transparency and independence in Cuba. This in turn managed to bring gradual movement of political activism from the cyberspace to the public space. What Sanchez and other Cuban bloggers portray, “Generally speaking, is the recognition of the disparity between the Cuba that ideally would be (or as Sánchez says “the Cuba that was promised to me as a girl”) and the Cuba that has come into being” (Timberlake, 2010). This reinforces the idea that apart from the existence of censorship in Cuba, there is also the combination of state propaganda feeding the people with certain ideals that might not be applied in practise. It is clear that, “while Sánchez may have begun her blog with the goal of simply communicating her version of her own reality, her blog and her life as a whole are now directed at drawing attention to the severe restrictions of the current regime and to effecting lasting change in the politics of Cuba” (Timberlake, 2010). Sanchez has also taken the next steps in touring outside Cuba in order to spread awareness on the Cuban situation. Amidst all of these actions, the Cuban government has been surprisingly lenient and tolerant. Moreover, both Diaz and Sanchez “are seeking to “extend the boundaries of free speech” and to redefine how appropriate participation can look when real value is attached to the expression of critique and dissent as part of a collaborative approach to a hegemonic discourse” (Timberlake, 2010).
The relationship between the concept of blogging and the government is a very intricate one since it involves the conflict of the regimes principles and practise of ideals. As mentioned in the introduction, Cuba deploys multiple methods in order to sustain its tight knitted controlled on the Cuban population. This is achieved through limited internet access for the locals, Propaganda in the media, and censorship of material against the regime’s ideals. More specifically several specific cases of blogs have been technically blocked and the famous blogger Sanchez had been denied the permission to leave the country until recently. That is why as mentioned before, Sanchez is organizing her tour worldwide, in order to finally present her views as she has always wished. Also, “Sánchez and other unauthorized bloggers have been portrayed as mercenaries of the revolution´s enemies” (Trimmer, 2014). Nonetheless, the repression and attempt to fight back the so called “internet insurgents” is also translated through the “operation truth” in which the “State embraced the new medium to counter the ideological challenge” (Trimmer, 2014).  This operation in turn relates with the Gramscian ideological “struggle” of hegemony, since it clearly represents the battle for rights between the leadership and the oppressed classes. Operation truth involved the emergence of official blogs as top-down initiatives and the purpose was to combat the “media terrorism” proclaimed to be existent by the bloggers such as Diaz and Sanchez. For example Fidel’s twitter page. Named as “Reflections by Fidel” ultimately is an attempt by the regime to pave an ideological path for the accepted ideals, that society should abide to. Also it is an attempt to give the people a form of intimacy with their leader through the cyberspace.
In Cuba blogging is perceived as an empowering action that defines individuals as “senders” in a global media reality. From such a statement it becomes apparent that, “In Cuba such an ability to circumvent media filters challenges the state´s grip on the public sphere” (Trimmer, 2014). Cuba is such a unique case in this aspect, because blogging in this country was born out of the constraint  on public debate in the physical world. From the moment the physical world was repressed, new alternative methods had to be discovered and utilized as a response. In the initial stages of blogging, people would “set up the blogs on a server outside of the island (“blind blogging”)” (Trimmer, 2014). This is a clear indication of the passion driving the people to get their point across to the state and the citizens. On the other hand the “State´s tight control served as a political magnifying glass” (Trimmer, 2014). Therefore both sides pushed each other in order to accomplish their aims regardless of the other. According to Christina Venegas, “Blogging emerges simultaneously as a measure of the difficulty of, and need for being in the world”. Moreover she mentions that “the networking that occurs constructs a bio politics where personal practices emerge alongside technology, political debate and, increasingly, broader economic forces” (Venegas, 2010).
Both sides are struggling to represent themselves above each other. The government due to the tools at its disposal is able to easily keep dominance on this front. According to the columnist Nat Hentoff “In Castro’s Cuba…there were no newspapers, except official ones. No books, except those sanctioned by the regime…jails filled with prisoners – from those who violently opposed the regime to those who simply dared speak out.” From this quote, the conception of the government’s dominance over the insurgent messages against the state repression is consolidated. Moreover in Hentoff’s article three main actions of the state to supress freedom of expression are stated. The state is said to have nationalized the communications industry, implemented severe and harsh punishments on Cubans who violate government restrictions and it denied the people of access of foreign information sources. Therefore once again, it is blatant that the people are at the mercy of the state and it really depends on those few pioneers who blog the truth and are allowed to do so by the government. In hindsight, the situation is improving and the Cuban state is gradually opening up to the world.
China is another example of a regime having complete control and supervision on the internet. What this entails is that by “Examining the experiences of these two countries may help to shed light on other authoritarian regimes’ strategies for Internet development, as well as help to develop generalizable conclusions about the impact of the Internet on authoritarian rule” (Kalathil and Boas, 2001). In this part of the essay a comparison of the two regimes will be made in terms of how they supervise internet usage within their sovereign borders. In both cases it is historically proven that they have the means to counter the multiple insurgent fronts they face from the development of the internet. Moreover, they both use very similar pro-active strategies in order to achieve their state interests such as internet usage restriction to the local population. Conversely, the two countries have differences in their reactive measures of control. “Cuba’s strategy hinges on control of access to the Internet, including a prohibition on individual public access and the careful selection of institutions that are allowed to connect to the Internet” (Kalathil and Boas, 2001) . “In contrast, China has promoted more widespread access to the Internet and has tried to limit the medium’s potential challenges through a combination of content filtering, monitoring, deterrence, and the promotion of self–censorship” (Kalathil and Boas, 2001). Another major difference between the two regimes, is that China is much more open in formulating its own version of a market-oriented information economy, than Cuba due to ideological differences. “Although China and Cuba both seek — in differing degrees — to modernize their economies through the use of information technology, this strategy brings with it inherent challenges” (Kalathil and Boas, 2001). This is because the emergence of such an economy, brings the rise of entrepreneurship which in turn leads to the creation of an economical elite that inevitably has political influence and demands. Nonetheless, both regimes have proven to be very strong in dealing with opposition and more specifically civil society organizations. Another aspect of this discourse worth discussing is that both authoritarian regimes did not lose control after the diffusion of the internet in their countries. “Although conventional wisdom often suggests that the Internet is an inherently democratizing technology, many authoritarian regimes have translated a long and successful history of control over previous ICTs into effective control of the Internet” (Kalathil and Boas, 2001). Therefore it is clear that, through the use of reactive strategies such as the restriction of access, removal of undesired information and promotion of self–censorship, authoritarian regimes can neutralise any problem regarding internet use. Finally, Voeux declares that there was a possible cooperation of Cuba with China in surveillance of electronic communication. Claire explains that, “China and Cuba have stepped up economic cooperation since President Hu Jintao’s visit in November 2004, following which a Chinese official said China would participate in developing the Cuban telecommunications sector” (Claire, 2006). On top of that she reports that according to an American site, it is known that in 2005 Santa Clara in cuba had electronic spying equipment. Such equipment clearly illustrates the fact that governments like Cuba are organising their defences carefully as a means to control the internet.
In accordance to the research question of the essay, regarding whether blogging dissidents have created social transformation in Cuba and to what extent, the answer is complicated. From analysing both sides it becomes apparent that the blogger dissidents have managed to make their voices heard in the global scene, but not as successfully in the interior. What this insinuates is that the Cuban government is in firm control of the internet usage and capacity, and is not intending on making it completely free. Although the government has shown signs of openness and adaptation towards the processes of globalization and technological advancement, it maintains many of its repressive features. Also its application of surveillance of the internet which is similar to the Chinese, brings doubts to what extent Cuba will open up. The only positive sign has been the lenience the state has given to certain key blogging dissidents that have made a sensation worldwide. Conversely, it beckons the question whether such leniency is tactical or a form of compromise from the government. Elaine Diaz and Yoani Sanchez are the pioneers of a liberating front on the internet that has culminated to a physical presence in society. Their actions offer voice to many people in the country and had been an onset of some social transformation in the demand of civil liberties.
In Conclusion it is blatant that the Blogging in Cuba is a start for the freedom of internet use in Cuba. There is an ongoing struggle between the government repression and the civilians push for more rights. “Blogging has made it possible for individuals to reconsider their identity and their relationship to the world culture and Cuban politics” (Venegas, 2010). “Even though it is clear that the Cuban government has not adopted a friendly position towards these bloggers, the activity in blogging persists because the writers are driven by the need to express their dissatisfaction with the Cuban government, and call for reforms of policies” (Venegas, 2010). However it is highly unlikely that we see any radical changes in the freedom of use of the internet anytime soon. But from viewing the changes occurring in the past years, optimism of change is present since the people’s culture and rights are not going to be restrained forever.





Bibliography

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