 
Cuba’s ‘Ladies in White’ targeted with arbitrary arrest and intimidation
22 August 2011
The Cuban authorities must end their intimidation of a group of  women campaigning for the release of political prisoners, Amnesty  International said after 19 of the group’s members were re-arrested  yesterday.
The latest detentions took place yesterday in and  near the south-eastern city of Santiago de Cuba, where the women were  due to march silently and pray for the end of political imprisonment.
Over  the last month, the “Ladies in White” (Damas de Blanco) and their  supporters have repeatedly faced arbitrary arrest and physical attacks  as they staged protests in several towns in the region.
“The  ongoing harassment of these courageous women has to stop. The Cuban  authorities must allow them to march peacefully and to attend religious  services as they wish,” said Javier Zuñiga, Special Advisor at Amnesty  International.
The latest arrests took place as “Ladies in White”  gathered in several locations to make their way to a planned march at  the Cathedral in Santiago de Cuba.
Eleven of the “Ladies in  White” gathered yesterday morning at the home of a supporter in the town  of Palma Soriano. A crowd of some 100 people, including police,  officials and government supporters, surrounded the house for several  hours.
When the women attempted to leave, police pushed them and  pulled their hair before forcing them into buses. They were driven a  few kilometres away where they were transferred to police cars and  dropped near their hometowns in the provinces of Santiago de Cuba and  Holguín.
Police also surrounded the house of Tania Montoya  Vázquez, another “Lady in White” from Palma Soriano for several hours  yesterday, preventing her and two fellow protesters from leaving.
Five  other “Ladies in White” who live in the city of Santiago were arrested  before they could reach the Cathedral and were held in police stations  for several hours. It is believed that they have all been released.
Beginning  on 17 July, groups of the “Ladies in White” have gathered on Sundays to  stage silent protests and attend mass in Santiago de Cuba and several  nearby towns.
The “Ladies in White” and the “Ladies in Support”  (Damas de Apoyo) are a nationwide network of activists in Cuba that have  recently escalated their peaceful protests in eastern provinces. In  Havana and elsewhere, they have repeatedly suffered harassment from  Cuban authorities for their peaceful protests.
In central Havana  on 18 August 2011, 49 “Ladies in White” and their supporters were  prevented from carrying out a protest in support of their members in  Santiago de Cuba and other eastern provinces.
In 2003, Cuban  authorities rounded up 75 of the group’s relatives for their involvement  in peaceful criticism of the government.
The 75 dissidents were  subjected to summary trials and sentenced to prison terms of up to 28  years. Amnesty International considered them all to be prisoners of  conscience, and the last of them were finally released in May 2011.
The  “Ladies in White” and “Ladies in Support” continue to peacefully  protest for the release of others who they believe have been imprisoned  due to their dissident activities.
“It is unacceptable for the  government under Raúl Castro’s leadership to perpetuate a climate of  fear and repression to silence ordinary Cubans when they dare to speak  out,” said Javier Zuñiga.
 

 

 
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