Cuba blasts naming of exile to HUD
The Cuban press reacted virulently Wednesday to President-elect
George W.
Bush's appointment of a Cuban-born politician to the post of
U.S. secretary of
housing.
The official news agency Prensa Latina reported that the nomination
of Orange
County Chairman Mel Martínez to the Cabinet post was payback
for "the help
[Bush] received from Cuban Americans in Florida, who helped him
defeat his
Democratic rival, Albert Gore.''
The agency describes Martínez as "a rabidly anti-Cuban
Republican'' and "an
unconditional ally of the Bush family'' who is "one of the political
hacks in
Florida's Cuban communities.''
Bush ``stole the election, an act of fraud that bore the fingerprints
of the extreme
right of Florida's Cuban community,'' the report said.
According to Prensa Latina, Martínez's nomination settles
"Bush's debt of
gratitude toward [Florida Cubans], the only Hispanics who voted
in bloc against
Gore because the Democratic administration authorized the return
to Cuba of the
kidnapped boy Elián González.''
Martínez "demanded the government of William Clinton and
Gore to allow the boy
. . . to remain in the United States, despite the opposition
of the boy's father, a
resident of Cuba,'' the agency said.
Martínez himself ``was removed from Cuba in 1962 at the
age of 15, one of 14,000
children extracted from the island by the Central Intelligence
Agency, the U.S.
State Department and the Catholic Church hierarchy in the so-called
Operation
Peter Pan,'' the report said.
-- RENATO PEREZ