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J.R.R. TOLKIEN: Myth, Morality and Religion
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A Cuban's view of Fidel Castro (letter)

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 Contents - 28 Feb 2004NW 28 February 2004

COVER STORY: Don't torch the sugar industry! - Peter Westmore
CANBERRA OBSERVED: New tactics needed to handle Latham challenge
TRADE: Where does new free trade pact leave us? - Colin Teese
NCC holds successful 2004 National Conference - Pat Byrne
DRUGS: Sweden turns off teenage drug tap - David Perrin
STRAWS IN THE WIND : Alabama's got the bomb / Swords into ploughshares / Closed minds - Max Teichmann
Free trade and sugar (letter) - Margaret Menzel
Rethink US-Australia FTA (letter) - Alan Barron
A Cuban's view of Fidel Castro (letter) - Name and address supplied
Political correctness in schools (letter) - John Kelly
Superannuation a tax on families (letter) - Trevor Dawes
FAMILY: Marriage under attack - Richard Egan
TAIWAN: Cliffhanger election will affect China relations - Peter Westmore
MEDIA: Confronting sloppy journalism - Tim Wallace
HISTORY: The continuing legacy of the 1960s - Max Teichmann
COMMENT: Getting history wrong - Ross Fitzgerald's 'The Pope's Battalions' - Amy McGrath
BOOKS: The Electronic Whorehouse, by Paul Sheehan - Richard Egan (reviewer)
Books available from News Weekly Books

Sir;

I would like to congratulate Raymond Watson for his article about Castro's legacy (News Weekly, January 31). A Cuban who lived through that period in Cuba could have not written a better article about who was Che Guevara.

He did not have any business in Cuba but he went there to kill Cubans. He did not have any business in Africa but he went there to kill Africans. He did not have any business in Bolivia, but he went there to kill Bolivians, where he eventually died on his own sword.

In his article Watson mentions Guevara's role in the National Bank of Cuba.

I would like to add it was very insulting for every free-minded Cuban to see the national notes signed with the name of Che which means "mate" in Argentina. Imaging the Australian banknotes signed with the word "mate".

As far as I am concerned, Ernesto Guevara was the Bin Laden of his time - but without Bin Laden's money. For political reasons there was no doubt that Castro was more than happy to get rid of him. It will be very insulting for millions of people if, 30 years from now, they were to see in the streets people wearing Bin Laden T-shirts, as it is now for us to see people using Che Guevara's T-shirts.

Name and Address supplied,
but withheld on request.

 
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