Published Date: June 15, 2009
BUENOS AIRES: A dissident Cuban surgeon who had been denied permission to leave the island for more than a decade hugged her grandchildren yesterday for the first time after arriving to an emotional family reunion in Argentina. Dr. Hilda Molina, who quickly took advantage of the communist government's surprise decision late last week to let her leave, was also met by her son, Robert Quinones, whom she hadn't seen in 15 years. She will visit her ailing 90-year-old mother, who was allowed to leave Cuba mont
hs ago. "Thank God and everyone who helped me," said Molina, a once-prominent neurosurgeon who became a political pariah after criticizing Cuba's health system.
Dressed sharply in a red jacket with white details, the 66-year-old surgeon embraced her grandchildren, Roberto Carlos, 13, and Juan Pablo, 8, who were born after her son left Cuba and had only known her in photographs. Visibly moved, the doctor spoke briefly to the crush of reporters covering her trip, then was escorted by police to a quieter area of the airport.
Hilda is very excited. She appreciates your presence, but you startled her a little. She will talk to you all a little later," daughter-in-law Veronica Scarpatti told reporters. Quinones, who is also a doctor, said the family harbors no grudges. "It is not time to blame the Cuban government," he said, adding that his grandmother had not yet been told of Molina's arrival because of her delicate condition.
Molina's travel documents are good for several months, but she said she had not decided whether to return to Cuba. The surprise authorization Friday was seen as another government gesture of openness in the era after Fidel Castro, who ceded power to his brother Raul for health reasons in 2006. It was also seen as a nod to Argentine President Cristina Fernandez, a Cuba ally, who along with her husband and predecessor, Nestor Kirchner, had been asking the Castros since 2003 to allow Molina to leave.
Molina, who once posed for high-profile photos with Fidel Castro, was a well-known physician at a government institution until 1994, when she resigned after questioning the ethics of using human stem cell tissue in studies on treating ailments like Parkinson's disease. That same year her son left Cuba with his Argentine wife. Molina filed paperwork periodically seeking for permission to travel outside Cuba for 10 years and recently began the process again, expecting to be turned down.
While Cuba has sent thousands of doctors abroad on official aid missions, it restricts individual foreign travel by physicians, saying it spends too much training them to allow them to emigrate for higher salaries elsewhere. Cubans like Molina who dare to openly criticize Cuba's system are also often denied permission to leave the country. -AP