- Hilda Molina
Dr Hilda Molina is the former
chief neurosurgeon ofCuba . Molina was also a deputy in theCuban National Assembly but has been a critic of the Cuban government since the early 1990s. Her criticisms focus primarily on Cuba's state-governed healthcare system.In 1987, Molina founded the
neurosurgery center inHavana . By 1991, her center had become one of the most important scientific centers in Cuba. The same year, Molina claims she was informed by the then Minister of Health, Julio Teja, that her center was henceforth to treat foreigners paying in U.S. dollars. Previously, the center had treated only Cuban patients. Dr. Molina subsequently resigned her position at the center and her seat at the National Assembly. Molina claims that she and her son were subjected to mob retaliation in what are termed "acts of repudiation". She has continuously been denied a visa to travel for personal as well as professional reasons.Requests for travel
Dr. Molina has made many requests to visit family members residing in
Argentina . In 2004, after Molina was again denied a visa by the Cuban government, an Argentinian free-market orientedthinktank forwarded a letter from Dr. Molina to theUnited Nations Human Rights Commission and other international human rights groups. In the letter Molina stated: "The Cuban government impeded me from temporarily visiting Argentina for a reunion, after 11 years of forcible separation, with my son, who is a naturalized Argentine, and with his wife who is an Argentine citizen". She also listed numerous examples where she believed her rights had been violated by the Cuban authorities going on to state that "the arbitrary state organs that delay or deny, provoking the tearing apart of thousands of innocent families, that submerges them in paralyzing fear, so they are incapacitated to reclaim the respect for their rights most elemental." [http://www.bradynet.com/bbs/argentina/100105-0.html]In July 2006, a week before
Fidel Castro 's illness led to the Cuban transfer of presidential duties to brotherRaúl Castro , the Cuban President was questioned by international leaders and journalists on the issue whilst attending a conference in Argentina. Argentine PresidentNéstor Kirchner took the opportunity to press the Cuban leader to allow surgeon Hilda Molina, a one-time Castro ally, to leave Cuba to be with her children and grandchildren already in Argentina. [http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/15114410.htm] At an improvised press conference,Miami 's Channel 41 reporterJuan Manuel Cao asked Castro about Molina, a reportedly infuriated Castro asked the reporter, "Who is paying you?" and later accused him of being "a mercenary" for President Bush [http://www.azstarnet.com/allheadlines/139729] . Juan Manuel Cao was later confirmed to have been one of at least ten South Florida journalists to have received regular payments from the U.S. government. [ [http://travel2.nytimes.com/2006/09/09/washington/09cuba.html 10 Miami journalists take U.S. pay] Miami Herald September 8 2006]References
* [http://shr.aaas.org/rtt/report/sevn.htm The Effect of Travel Restrictions on Scientific Collaboration Between American and Cuban Scientists]
See also
*
Healthcare in Cuba
*Tourist apartheid in CubaReferences
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