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David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

Corbyn, Castro and the fraternal toleration of 'flaws'

December 1, 2016 13:08
3 min read

For all his flaws", said Jeremy Corbyn, Fidel Castro was "a huge figure of modern history, national independence and 20th-century socialism" who had been an "internationalist and a champion of social justice". His ally Ken Livingstone added that while Castro "initially wasn't very good on lesbian and gay rights,on the key things that mattered… people had a good education, good healthcare, and wealth was evenly distributed."

In a video interview Mr Corbyn added, with a little smile, that Castro had "outlasted 10 American presidents". He might have added, had he thought of it, that was three more than General Franco had managed and (thanks to Franklin Roosevelt's unique and now impossible four election victories) double Stalin's tally.

But then anyone with any sense of modern history watching Corbyn or Livingstone talking about the dictator, who for nearly 50 years ruled Cuba alongside his brother and a small group of comrades (and who was succeeded by his brother and a small group of comrades), will have known what "for all his flaws" or "the key things that mattered" meant.

They meant that actually Castro was pretty much vindicated in what he did, that insofar as he didn't run a Western style liberal democracy, he was probably right not to, and that to bang on about it would be a sign of hostility to the forces of progress and human advancement. Although Corbyn used, once again, his famous, "I condemn human rights violations and I condemn them everywhere" formulation, I could not find a single instance of him in over 45 years actually choosing to criticise the Cuban regime for such violations.