"The first victory we can claim is that our hearts are free of hatred. Hence we say to those who persecute us and who try to dominate us: ‘You are my brother. I do not hate you, but you are not going to dominate me by fear. I do not wish to impose my truth, nor do I wish you to impose yours on me. We are going to seek the truth together’. THIS IS THE LIBERATION WHICH WE ARE PROCLAIMING."
Oswaldo José Payá Sardiñas (2002)
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Cuba and the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
"When
our revolution is judged in future years, one of the matters on which
we will be judged is the manner in which our society and our homeland
solved the problems of women." ~ Fidel Castro, November 30, 1974
November 25th has been set aside as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women and the Castro regime is attempting to use the date to white wash its dismal record and ongoing institutionalized violence against women in Cuba. Unfortunately some international organizations and non governmental organizations have looked the other way and given the Cuban government a pass on its systematic and regular violence against women. Below is a partial listing of documented instances where agents of the Cuban dictatorship have engaged in violence against Cuban women arranged by the most recent dates on top with a focus on cases where they were trying to exercise their fundamental rights.
Lady in WhiteDaisy Cuello Basulto denounced that her 21 year old daughter was arrested, violentlystrippedand forced tourinatein front ofpolice officersin a policestation inCotorro. The 21 year old was arrested along with her momand other family on September27, 2015 while on their wayto attend the Sundaymarch ofthe Ladies in White. In the policestation"she washumiliated," althoughshe refusedto urinate in front of the agents, who constantly jeeredat her,explained her mother in an interview with Radio República. The young womanwas lockedin a cell witha strong smell ofhydrochloric acidand nowsuffers from asore throat."She has a fever and feels verybad," reported her mother.
On May 24, 2015 Sirley Ávila León was the victim of a machete attack
Sirley Ávila León, an ex-delegate of the People’s Assembly (Poder
Popular) of Majibacoa who joined the democratic opposition after trying to keep a school open in her
community. Official channels ignored her requests and when she went to the
international media she was removed from office. Following escalating
acts of repression by state security the mother of two, Sirley Ávila León, age 56, was gravely wounded in a machete attack on May 24, 2015 at 3:00pm by Osmany Carrión who had been "sent by state security thugs" and that the aggression "was politically motivated." She suffered deep cuts to her neck and knees, lost her left hand and could still lose her right arm.
Yris Pérez Aguilera shows cyst result of state security beatings. (Photo: Yoani Sanchez)
On September 20, 2013 human rights defender Yris Tamara Pérez Aguilera briefly described the abuse she had been subjected to by agents of Cuban state security earlier that same year to the 24th Session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva:
I have been the victim of several acts of aggression on the part of the Cuban
authorities, especially by the agents Yuniel Monteagudo Reina and Eric
Aquino Yera. They have beaten me into unconsciousness in the pavement,
as took place most recently this past March 7 in Santa Clara. The hits
to the head, neck, and back have caused me serious health problems that I
have not been able to recover from. In addition to beating me, they
have threatened me with death on various occasions, these agents have
told me that they are going to rape me, and have shown their genitals
during arbitrary arrests.
On Sunday, July 21, 2013 Sonia Álvarez Campillo was brutally beaten by agents of the
Cuban government for her dissent and suffered lasting physical
damage. Over twitter the aftermath of the attack was posted by her daughter Sayli Navarro who tweeted:
"My mom Sonia Álvarez Campillo, shows x-rays and arm fractured by her
repressors on Sunday" and independent journalist Ivan Hernandez Carrillo tweeted: "This is the Lady in White Sonia Álvarez Campillo after today's first act of repudiation against Ladies in White."
Sonia Álvarez Campillo's arm fractured by regime repressors July 21, 2013
There for everyone to see, a woman with a her left arm in a cast holding
up her x-ray showing where the breaks are following a savage attack on
Sunday by regime agents. This is not an isolated case but a disturbing pattern of increasing violence against nonviolent activists that is primarily but not only targeting women.
Marina Montes Piñón age 60 beaten by regime agents. Needed 30 stitches
Marina Montes Piñón, a 60 year old woman and long time opposition
activist, was beaten with a blunt object by regime agents on December 15, 2012 in
Cuba. The end result, three deep wounds in the skull and a hematoma in the right eye. She needed nearly thirty stitches to patch up the wounds.
Berenice Héctor González mutilated for verbally defending Ladies in White
Berenice Héctor González, a 15-year old young woman, suffered a knife attack on November 4, 2012 for supporting the women's human rights movement, The Ladies in White.
News of the attack only emerged a month later because State Security
had threatened the mother that her daughter would suffer the consequences if she made the assault public.
Laura Pollán repeatedly beaten and died under suspicious circumstances
Laura Inés Pollán Toledo, one of the founders of the Ladies in White in
March of 2003 and its chief spokeswoman was widely admired inside of
Cuba and internationally. She fell suddenly ill and died within a week on October 14, 2011under suspicious circumstances that a Cuban medical doctor described as "painful, tragic and unnecessary." This took place within days of the Ladies in White declaring themselves a human rights organization dedicated to the
freedom of all political prisoners, not just their loved ones.
Maria Elena Cruz Varela around time of 1991 attack
"They broke my mouthtrying to make meswallowthe leafletsthat membersof my grouphad distributed throughout Havana. Afterwards I spent three daysbrutallybesieged, imprisoned inmyown homewith my two children, with no water, noelectricity, no food, nocigarettes. We heardwhat thehuge speakersnever stopped amplifying, allegoricalsongsto the country,thenecessary punishmentof traitors, andanyone who wanted tocould shoutat me, organized, of course, the slogansthey pleased: Comrade worm, we are going to execute you by firing squad!"
On February 26, 1961, Cuban state security agents arrested 23-year-old medical student Ana Lazara Rodriguez she had been distributing literature and speaking out against Fidel Castro as he assumed dictatorial powers in Cuba. She spent 19 years in the women's prison at Guanajay,
located in Eastern Cuba, and was exiled to the United
States on February 26, 1980. She was subjected to beatings, starvation,
threats, hard labor, and solitary confinement for
months at a time. Ana described in a 2007 interview with the Hudson Reporter how: "The men constantly beat us with their bayonets, and they would cram
the cells so that we couldn't all fit," ... We used to take
turns standing and sitting. Many women became ill because the
conditions were so confined and there was a lack of oxygen. We were
treated like animals."
"The brutalityof the policeandstate security agents, including women members of these bodies, against womendissidents, is supported by thestate, whichexemplifies theinstitutionalized violenceas a meansto represswomen opposition activists. Arbitrary detentionis one of themethods toprevent them from exercisingtheir rightsto speak, associate anddemonstrate.Indetention centersagents useviolence,sexualassault andinsultsas means ofrepression.Thecellsenclosed inunsanitaryand sometimes sanitary serviceshave no privacy orarenotappropriate for women, even having them share prison cellswith men. In some cases,they forcedto stripnakedorforcibly stripped,obliging them tosquat tosee if they haveitemsin theirgenitals andclaims thathave been reported that theyhaveintroduceda peninto the vagina, under the justificationofseekingrecording objects."
This is a partial and incomplete summary. The plight of women in Cuba over the past 56 years would fill a library, but it is important to recall that the above violence is promoted, coordinated and carried out by agents of the Castro regime.
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