What, from
the technological and economic points of view, has been the
worst problem faced by poor countries? The brain drain.
What has
been their worst problem in patriotic and educational terms?
Talent theft.
In poor countries, local newspapers and honest
individuals who are interested in sports begin to ask
themselves why they must endure the theft of their nation's
talented athletes, after the many sacrifices and investments
it took to train them.
Cuba, whose successes and efforts in the field of
amateur sports no one can put in question, suffers these
kinds of piranha bites more than any other country. Just
look at how the talent scouts react to Cuba's accusations.
When I spoke of the German mafia and the millions of dollars
it had at its disposal to bribe Cuban athletes, they
immediately felt they had been alluded to and declared: “no,
no, we’re not a mafia!".
They gave a detailed account of how the shameful
business of purchasing and selling boxers works. I quote
their statements below, in the order they reached me:
Hamburg, July 24 (DPA) - The heads of Arena
Box Promotions, a German company that scouts foreign amateur
boxers to turn them into professionals, defended themselves
today fromt criticisms by Cuban President Fidel Castro.
Castro’s accusations reached Muller-Michaelis through DPA,
which, in an article today published by Cuban newspapers,
confirmed the desertions of two-time world and Olympic
champion Guillermo Rigondeaux and world champion Erislandy
Lara, members of Cuba’s delegation at the Pan-American Games
held in Rio de Janeiro.
“In Germany, there is a mafia devoted to selecting, buying
and promoting Cuban boxers in international boxing matches”,
the Cuban leader affirmed. “It uses sophisticated
psychological methods and many millions of dollars”, he
added.
Hamburg, July 25 (DPA) – The two Cuban boxers
who deserted during this year's Pan-American Games in Rio de
Janeiro, Guillermo Rigondeaux and Erislandy Lara, turned to
mediators to come into contact with the German promotional
agency Arena Box Promotions, according to declarations for a
Berlin newspaper made by Turkish German promoter Ahmet Oner,
president of the company.
In the brief declarations he offered the newspaper, Oner
claims it was the boxers who separated themselves from their
country’s delegation and sought contact with his company,
and not the other way around, as was insinuated in a number
of Cuban media.
In view of this, Oner, who is not currently in Germany but
vacationing somewhere in Southern Europe, said that he
decided to send emissaries to South America to try and
contact Rigondeaux and Lara, offering no further details.
Oner’s declarations were confirmed in Hamburg
today by Arena spokesman Malthe Muller-Michaelis, who
reiterated that the initiative was the Cuban deserters', as
he declared to the press agency DPA.
In this case, the athletes in question are Odlanier Solís,
Yuriokis Gamboa and Yan Barthelemy, who are currently not in
Germany but vacationing abroad.
In this connection, Peter Danckert, chairman of the
Bundestag Sports Commission (Lower Chamber) of the German
Parliament refused to make declarations on the Cuban boxers
who deserted.
I'll let the experts on the matter do that, he commented in
response to a request from the agency DPA in Berlin.
Hamburg,–July 26 (DPA) – The two Cuban boxers who "deserted"
at the 2007 Pan-American Games in Rio, Guillermo Rigondeaux
and Erislandy Lara, are currently in Turkey, where they
await a German visitor's permit, according to an article
published by the newspaper Morgenpost today.
We have hired Rigondeaux and Lara, the Turkish president of
the Hamburg promotional agency Arena, Ahmet Oner, told the
newspaper.
Fidel, naturally, is angry, but he has no reason to be
surprised. His boxers do not want to be amateurs their
entire lives, they want to make money, Oner declared for the
paper.
Fidel wants to hide his formidable boxers from
the world. I show them to the world, the young, 34-year-old
promoter underscored.
Twenty-six-year-old Rigondeaux is extraordinarily talented.
Between 1999 and 2003, the two-time bantamweight Olympic
champion won 142 consecutive fights.
Oner told Morgenpost that, Castro’s anger vis-à-vis the
“German mafia” notwithstanding, he wants to do business with
the Cuban president. I will suggest to him organizing a
boxing evening in Havana shortly, he added.
Hamburg, July 26 (DPA) – Cuban boxers Guillermo Rigondeaux,
two-time bantamweight Olympic champion, and Erislandy Lara,
world welterweight champion, signed contracts with the
German Arena Box Promotions following their 'desertion'
during the Pan-American Games of Rio de Janeiro.
All speculations have come to an end: Rigondeaux and Lara
have signed five-year contracts with Arena, a communiqué
published by the Hamburg-based company headed by
Turkish-German promoter Ahmet Oner confirmed today.
According to the communiqué issued by Arena,
the two boxers will shortly travel to Germany. Oner refused
to reveal the current whereabouts of Rigondeaux and Lara,
for understandable reasons, but he commented that the steps
needed to secure visitor permits and German residencies were
being taken.
HAMBURG, July 26 (AP) – “Two Cuban boxers who defected
during the Pan American Games in Brazil signed five-year
contracts Thursday to fight on a cable television station.
"Guillermo
Rigondeaux, a bantamweight who won gold at the 2000 and 2004
Olympics, and Erislandy Lara, an amateur welterweight world
champion, signed with Arena TV.
Arena TV is the company that other three first-class Cuban
boxers, who deserted in December, signed with.
“'Now
the best up-and-coming professionals in the world fight for
Arena',' company boss Ahmet Oner said.”
“The two fighters failed to appear for bouts after leaving
the Pan Ams athletes' village Sunday in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil.
“Since the 2004 Olympics, the Cuban boxing program has been
hit hard by defections, with several champions now fighting
professionally in the United States and Europe”.
Arena wants to secure a place for itself in the
world of televised sports and believes the Cubans are a
great investment.
Rio de Janeiro - July 26 (EFE) – In declarations for a Brazilian newspaper,
German businessman Ahmet Omer, promoter of four Cuban boxers
who have already sought asylum in Germany, admitted he
organized the get-away of two Cuban boxers who deserted
during the Pan-American Games of Rio de Janeiro.
I organized the whole thing, the owner of the
company Arena Box Promotions stated during declarations
published today by the Folha de Sao Paolo newspaper, where
he admitted having paid nearly half a million dollars to
finance the operation.
Twenty-six-year-old two-time bantamweight Olympic
and world champion Rigondeaux was one of Cuba's main figures
at the Rio de Janeiro Pan-American Games and was considered
a sure medal for the country.
The boxers' desertion was discovered this week
when they failed to appear for weighting, to which they had
to be submitted to fight in their respective categories, in
which they were gold-medal candidates.
A German company here with contacts in South
America brought me Barthelemy, Gamboa and Solís in December.
I paid good money for them. They later brought me Ridondeaux
and Lara, the boxers' representative affirmed.
I took good care of Solís, Gamboa and Barthelemy,
who are friends of Rigondeaux and Lara’s. I believe that
helped, the businessman added upon commenting that the
boxers’ friendship helped in making the other two Olympic
champions opt for deserting to begin professional careers in
Germany.
The German promoter said that the operation
undertaken last December to organize the desertion of three
boxers and transport them to Germany cost him around 1.5
million dollars.
The five will be world professional boxing
champions. Today, I am the youngest boxing promoter in
Europe. With them, I will be the greatest, he declared.
Hamburg, July 26 (DPA) - The desertion had been
planned months in advance, for a tournament in Ankara. But,
on that occasion, Cuba participated with a B team, without
Rigondeaux, which was the boxer Oner was most interested in.
Following this, when Cuba decided not to take
part in Germany's Halle tournament, where the Chemie Pokal
tournament is traditionally held, Oner began to suspect Cuba
had been tipped off that a boxer was considering desertion.
The city of Halle and the Chemie Pokal tournament had been
the stage, already over a decade ago, of the desertion of
Cuban cruiserweight boxer Juan Carlos Gómez (one of the four
boxers who had been bought in the past).
That is why we set our sights on Rio and the
Pan-American games, where we finally reached our objective,
he said.
Now, we are going through the red tape with the
boys, and, once we have all of the documents, we’ll travel
to Germany, where we will give them a welcoming ceremony at
the appropriate time, he pointed out. The two Cubans signed
five-year contracts.
For the other Cubans, all this took three months.
With these two young men, we'll take half the time, that is
to say, a month and a half.
Just look at how they boast about their foul deed against
our country. Everyone knew perfectly well that Cuba would
obtain nearly all gold medals in boxing. They had to deal
our country a blow, and they not only bought two athletes
who were sure to win gold medals, they also attempted to
deal a blow to the pristine morale of the other athletes who
continued to defend their gold medals with valor. The low
blow even had repercussions among the judges.
But they would never have been able, not with all of the
world's money, to buy men like Stevenson, Savón, or the
deceased Roberto Balado, whose beautiful tradition
bequeathed much glory to Cuban boxing.
In spite of everything, we have already won 44 gold medals.
Fidel Castro Ruz
July 27, 2007
6:35 p.m.