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Culture > Cuba > Dissent Remains...
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Dissent Remains Outside Cuba's Reforms

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 22, 2008 at 09:02 PM

Dissent Remains Outside Cuba's Reforms
Ray Sanchez | Direct from Havana
7:36 AM EDT, April 22, 2008
Havana, Cuba

A peaceful sit-in by women demanding the release of their jailed 
husbands was broken up by government su****ters Monday. The outnumbered 
demonstrators were forced onto a bus near the offices of Cuban President 
Raul Castro and driven home.

The outcome of the quiet protest by 10 women, half of them members of 
the dissident group Women in White, underscored the Castro government's 
willingness to lift some restrictions on the lives of Cubans while 
refusing to tolerate even the slightest dissent.

"The message is clear: zero political tolerance," said dissident 
Elizardo Sanchez, president of the Cuban Commision for Human Rights and 
National Reconciliation, which is illegal but tolerated by the state. 
"At least in the area of human rigths, there is no significant change in 
Cuba."

A government statement read on the state media Monday night called the 
demonstration a "crude and shameful provocation" by mercenaries carrying 
out orders of anti-Castro forces in Miami. The statement was published 
in the state press Tuesday.

The statement said the demonstrators on Friday received a 22-minute 
phone call of encouragement from Florida congresswoman Ileana 
Ros-Lehtinen, a Castro foe and proponent of U.S. funds intended to 
undermine the island's government.

The 10 demonstrators gathered early Monday at a park that is part of 
Havana's vast Revolution Square. The women intended to deliver a letter 
addressed to Raul Castro and other officials, according to organizers 
and human rights observers. After waiting at the park a little more than 
two hours, their protest was broken up by 20 female police officers who 
arrived by bus.

The protesters, surrounded by angry government sup****ters shouting 
obcenities, locked arms and refused to leave, organizers and observers 
said. The women, wearing white T-****rts emblazoned with the faces and 
names of their jailed loved ones, were dragged onto a bus and driven 
home. No serious injuries were re****ted.

"We cannot allow them to even come close to Revoultion Plaza," one 
government sup****ter told Cuban television. "Everyone knows the 
historical significance of the plaza."

Earlier this year, Cuba announced that it had signed international 
agreements adopted by the United Nations on civil and political rights.

Since officially becoming the communist island's first new president in 
nearly 50 years in February, Raul Castro has taken over for his ailing 
brother Fidel by introducing modest changes in daily life. For instance, 
restrictions on the owner****p of computers and cell phones and stays at 
tourist hotels were lifted recently. But many Cubans doubt that more 
profound change is in store.

"It is clear that the government will continue to repress the peaceful 
demands of defenseless women," said Miriam Leyva, a member of the Women 
in White who did not participate in Monday's demonstration. She called 
the recent reforms "cosmetic."

Every Sunday, the Women in White hold a silent march along Havana's 
Fifth Avenue, calling for the release of relatives jailed during a March 
2003 roundup of 75 government critics.

Since the Black Spring crackdown five years ago, 16 of the original 75 
dissidents have been released on medical parole. Four more were freed 
into forced exile in Spain last month.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-0422havanadaily,0,31312.column
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Dissent Remains Outside Cuba's Reforms
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-22 21:02:58 

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