Friday, December 18, 2015

Remembering and celebrating the life of Václav Havel 4 years after his passing

"Work for something because it is good, not just because it stands a chance to succeed."- Václav Havel

Václav Havel, (1939 - 2011)
 Four years ago today Václav Havel departed this mortal coil and today he is remembered with photos of people around the world wearing short trousers. Czechs continue to remember and honor not only his ideas but also his sense of humor. Visit the website of Den Václava Havla to understand the historic significance of the link between Havel and short trousers.

Today the trousers I wore where visibly short and the pictures are here to prove it, also reviewed the Czech dissident's writings and sayings, and finally screened "The Power of the Powerless" a film narrated by Jeremy Irons that prominently features Václav Havel and his role in the Velvet Revolution of 1989. Until his final days Havel engaged in actions of solidarity on behalf of pro-democracy dissidents under oppressive regimes.
Honoring and remembering Havel with short trousers
Met him only a handful of times, but four years after his passing I still miss Vaclav Havel as do millions of others.  He was a playwright, a philosopher, an intellectual, a dissident, a president and rock n roll aficionado. Havel was that rarest of creatures a good man who still managed to be a great politician. His work and legacy are there for all to see, and his words and example continue to be celebrated. Here is a small sampling of Václav Havel's words:
"Anyone who takes himself too seriously always runs the risk of looking ridiculous; anyone who can consistently laugh at himself does not."

"The tragedy of modern man is not that he knows less and less about the meaning of his own life, but that it bothers him less and less."

"The salvation of this human world lies nowhere else than in the human heart, in the human power to reflect, in human meekness and human responsibility."

"Even a purely moral act that has no hope of any immediate and visible political effect can gradually and indirectly, over time, gain in political significance.

"I really do inhabit a system in which words are capable of shaking the entire structure of government, where words can prove mightier than ten military divisions."

"Sometimes I wonder if suicides aren't in fact sad guardians of the meaning of life"

"Hope is not the conviction that something will turn out well but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out."

"True enough, the country is calm. Calm as a morgue or a grave, would you not say?"

"There's always something suspect about an intellectual on the winning side."

Prague remembers Havel in 2015







Thursday, December 17, 2015

Open Letter to President Obama on U.S. Cuba policy by Free Cubans

Free Cubans analyze U.S. Cuba policy outlining the negative consequences of the past year and the future in open letters to President Obama. The first is a video letter produced by the Cuban Democratic Directorate in which activists and the parents of Mario de la Peña, one of the four men, murdered on February 24, 1996 in a murder conspiracy engineered by the Castro dictatorship address the shortcomings of the policy. The second is a letter by 126 former political prisoners who collectively served 1,945 years in Castro's prisons calling on President Obama to revisit his Cuba policy.  




126 FORMER CUBAN POLITICAL PRISONERS CALL ON PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA TO REVISIT HIS CUBA POLICY

Center for a Free Cuba sent an e-mail that in part reported the following: "The letter was given to the National Security Council at 9:38 this morning. The letter was given by Ernesto Diaz Rodríguez, former Cuban political prisoner and poet who served more than 22 years in Castro’s political prisons and forced labor camps. At 11 AM there will be a demonstration of political prisoners, families, and friends in front of the White House requesting that President Barack Obama ask Raul Castro to stop the attacks against the Ladies in White and to stop the beatings. The prisoners hope that if their request reaches the President, President Obama will call Raul Castro on the telephone to ask him to stop the beatings in Cuba."  


December 17, 2015

Mr. Barack H. Obama
President of United States of America
The White House
Washington, DC 20500

Mr. President:

Based on our history and experience as political prisoners under Castro’s totalitarian regime, the new Cuba policy established by your Administration has been a regrettable mistake. This will prolong the life of the dictatorship, is worsening the human rights situation there, marginalizing the democratic opposition and compromising U.S. national security.

The normalization of relations is creating false expectations and granting benefits to the tyrannical regime in Cuba; it is also allowing the Paris Club to forgive billions in debt providing the regime hard currency which it funnels into its most repressive institutions: the military and intelligence services giving new life to what we’re dying institutions. Human rights violations in Cuba have a terrible history, but the current policy has taken a bad situation and made it worse. Violent beatings against activists peacefully assembling have escalated and worsened over 2015.

Politically motivated arbitrary detentions in Cuba as of the end of November 2015 are a documented total of 7,686 and are on track to break the previous record set in 2014 with 8,899 arrests. Over the course of this year the number of detentions have escalated: 178 in January; 492 in February; 610 in March; 338 in April; 641 in May; 563 in June; 674 in July; 768 in August; 882 in September; 1,093 in October; and 1,447 in November. Political prisoners continue to be a reality in Cuba.

Despite the claim that there would be continued support for improved human rights and democratic reforms in Cuba the past year has demonstrated otherwise. Inviting the Castro regime to the VII Summit of the Americas in Panama in April of 2015, violated the democratic ideals of the summit. The dictatorship’s anti-democratic and violent nature was made evident during the Summit with Cuban nationals and U.S. citizens beaten up by state security and requiring hospitalization and summit events interrupted by acts of repudiation organized by the Castro regime. The U.S. government responses were low level pro-forma protests while President Obama met with Raul Castro as an equal.

The Administration’s new Cuba policy over the past year has compromised U.S. national security. First, commuting Gerardo Hernandez’s two life sentences; he was convicted for among other things conspiracy to murder three U.S. citizens and one resident of the U.S., and returning him to Cuba where he received a hero’s welcome in what was an immense propaganda victory for the Castro regime, sending a dangerous signal to those who would harm Americans.

Secondly, removing Cuba from the state sponsors of terrorism list on May 29, 2015 despite: 1) the Castro regime being caught smuggling heavy weapons and ammunition through Colombia on February 28, 2015. 2) Being linked to international drug trafficking along with its client state Venezuela as reported on January 27, 2015. 3) Being in violation of UN international sanctions to North Korea on July 15, 2013 when caught smuggling tons of weapons and ammunition including ballistic missile technology. Ignoring this will get more Americans killed and undermine U.S. interests.

Finally, having the US Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas meet with the Castro regime’s Interior Minister Major General Carlos Fernandez Gondin in what was officially described as a visit of collaboration and engagement sends worrisome signals that should concern those who care about national security. Gondin has a history of engaging in the mistreatment of opposition activists and has an agenda to undermine U.S. interests, legitimizing him with an official visit sends a terrible message.

We the undersigned are political prisoners who collectively have served 1,945 years in prison for resisting the Castro dictatorship and fighting for democracy in our homeland of Cuba. We are writing this letter out of a deep conviction that this new U.S. Cuba policy will not only harm Cuban aspirations for a free and democratic Cuba while worsening human rights there but also endanger American lives.

Sincerely,


NAME:                                     YEARS IN PRISON:
Orestes Abreu                                        5
Israel Abreu Villarreal                           14
Dr. José Aguiar                                     15
Nicolás Aguiar                                      15
Ángel Alfonso Alemán                          18
Felipe Alonso                                        15
Miguel Álvarez Cardentey                     24
Bernardo Álvares Perdomo                  10
Francisco Álvarez Rojas                       13
Jorge Arrastía                                       15
 Ángel Ávalos                                        17
Gabriel Astengo                                      9
José Bello                                               9
Emilio Bringas                                       15
Rodolfo Camps Verdecia                        9
Aurelio Candelaria Velázquez               18
Héctor Carbonell                                     5
Carlos Casanova                                  20
Pedro Castillo                                       20
Orlando Castro                                     10
Joaquín Chanyín                                  18
Georgina Cid                                        15
Pedro Corzo                                           7
Enrique Cosío                                      13
René Cruz Cruz                                   17
Ángel Cuadra Landrove                       15
Ignacio Cuesta                                     29
Ileana Curra Luzón                                3
Pascual Ovidio Delgado                      15
Javier Denis                                        16
Ángel F. De Fana                                20
José M. Del Pino Martínez                 19
Jesús Díaz Martínez                          14
Ernesto Díaz Rodríguez                     22
Vicente Echerri                                     2.5
Cándido Elejalde                                12
Guillermo Estévez                              19
Mario Fajardo                                     17
Jorge Fernández                                  6
José L. Fernández                               6
Oneida Fernández                             10
Alberto Fibla González                       26
Osvaldo Figueroa                               24
José Luis Fornell                                12
Pedro Fuentes Cid                             16
Ángel García Martínez                       10
Hiran González                                  11 months
Teodoro González Alvarado              21
Luis González Infante                       16
Jesús González Martínez                 15
Rubén Gonzalo García                     18
Elias Gonzalo García                        14
Alberto Grau                                      25
Manuel F. Guevara                            29
Jorge Gutiérrez Izaguirre                  18
José A. Gutiérrez Solana                  10
Basilio Guzmán  Marrero                  22
Jorge Guzmán Chaple                     13
Ambrosio Guzmán                           15
Rafael Hernández                              4
Sergio Hernández                             12
Dasio René Hernández Peña           28
Servando Infante                              18
Kemel Jamis Bernal                          14        
José A. Jiménez                                12
Roberto Jiménez                               17
Tobías Junco                                     10
Antonio Lamas                                   22
Gloria Lassales                                    6
Isidoro López                                       2 
Pedro López González                       10
Pedro Juan López Díaz   (Vzla)          10
Reinaldo López Lima                          23            
Antonio López Muñoz                         27
Jesús Lucena                                     18
Maritza Lugo                                        5
Carlos Fausto Mariscal                      28
Ino Martel Casuso                               6
Domingo Martínez                               9
Leuterio Martínez                              12
Teodoro Martínez                              16
Emilio Martínez Venega                    14
Luis Massón                                        6
Eduardo Ochoa                                   9
Ángel Pardo Mazorra                        24
Ramón Méndez Pimentel                  26
Ricardo Montero Duque                    25
Eduardo Morales                                 6
Alejandro Moreno Maya                    18
Olga Morgan                                     14
Sixto Nicot                                         18
Emelina Núñez                                    6
Pablo Palmiere                                  18
Roberto Martín Pérez                        28
Ildefonso Pérez                                   6
Roberto Perdomo                              28
Roberto Pizano                                 18
Carlos Pons                                       20
Ramón (Rino) Puig                            15
Pablo Prieto Castillo                          26
José L. Pujals Mederos                     27
J. René Ramos                                 21
Hernán Reyes                                     8
Roger Reyes                                     20
José del Río                                      15
Agapito Rivera                                  25
Agustín Robaina                               15
Ofelia Rodríguez                               14
Nelson Rodríguez Pérez                     9
Jesús Rodríguez Beruvides              16
Tebelio Rodríguez San Román         15
Aracely Rodríguez San Román         15
Gerardo Rodríguez San Román        15
Rodolfo Rodríguez San Román         15
José O. Rodríguez Terreiro                23
Lionel Rodríguez de la Torre              10
Ana María Rojas                                12
Nellys Rojas Morales                           9
Caridad Roque                                   16
Alvin Ros                                              6
Enrique Ruano Gutiérrez                     8
Ariel Semanat                                    18
Evaristo Sotolongo                             16
Arturo Suárez Ramos                        23
Luis M. Tapia                                      11
Efraín Taquechel                               10
Ricardo Toledo                                    9
Armando Yong                                  21










Castro clings to power and President Obama has his hand out

"We are going to have diplomatic relations with the United States without having ceded one iota." - Gerardo Hernandez, Cuban spy sentenced to life in prison for murder conspiracy freed by Obama as part of his deal with Raul Castro. (Capitol Hill Cubans)

Castro and President Obama (April 2015) Sirley Ávila machete attacked (May 2015)

Breaking Kennedy's policy
President Barack Obama in his first inaugural address on January 20, 2009 declared “To those who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent, know that you are on the wrong side of history, but that we will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist.” The Obama administration’s Cuba policy was not reset on December 17, 2014 but was a continuation of what came before when it began to loosen sanctions on the Castro regime on April 13, 2009. The Washington Post in 2009 described it as “breaking from policies first imposed by the Kennedy administration and stepping into an emotional debate over the best way to bring democratic change to one of the last remaining communist regimes.” 

Snubbing dissidents
At the same time that the President extended a hand to the Castro dictatorship he withdrew it from Cuban democrats. President Obama refused to meet in June of 2009 with the winners of the National Endowment for Democracy’s Democracy Award who happened to be five Cuban dissidents that year. This was the first time in five years that the president of the United States had not met with the award laureates.

The regime strikes back
The response by the Cuban government to the overtures of the Obama administration in December of 2009 was to take an American citizen, Alan Gross, hostage. The administration responded with initial silence and it took American diplomats 25 days to visit the arbitrarily detained American.
On January 14, 2011 with this American citizen still arbitrarily detained in Cuba the Obama administration loosened travel restrictions on travel to the island to an extent not seen in a decade. The concessions and the cold shoulder to Cuban dissidents sent a clear message to the dictatorship that would be devastating for the prospects of a nonviolent and democratic transition in Cuba.

Murdered activists
These signals would coincide with the start of three devastating years for the Cuban democratic opposition. Rising levels of violence against  nonviolent activists and the suspicious deaths of human rights defenders: Orlando Zapata Tamayo (February 23, 2010), Daisy Talavera de las Mercedes Lopez (January 31, 2011) , Juan Wilfredo Soto Garcia (May 8, 2011), Laura Inés Pollán Toledo (October 14, 2011), Wilman Villar Mendoza (January 19, 2012), Sergio Diaz Larrastegui (April 19, 2012), Oswaldo Payá Sardiñas (July 22, 2012) and  Harold Cepero Escalante (July 22, 2012). Both Laura Pollán and Oswaldo Payá each had the international recognition and ability to head an authentic democratic transition in Cuba. Oswaldo Payá had forced the dictatorship to change the constitution in 2002 because of Project Varela, a citizen initiative demanding legal reforms within the existing system, and Laura  Pollán through constant street demonstrations achieved the freedom of scores of Cuban prisoners of conscience. It is important to remember that the deaths of these high profile human rights defenders happened on President Obama's watch.

Skyrocketing arbitrary detentions
In 2008 according to the Cuban Commission of Human Rights and National Reconciliation (CCDHRN) there were 640 arbitrary detentions in Cuba during the first six months. Cuban human rights defender Juan Carlos González Leiva documented 1,500 arrests for all of 2008.  The Obama administration entered office on January 20, 2009. In 2010 the number of politically motivated arbitrary detentions in Cuba increased to 2,074 arbitrary detentions and tripled in 2013 with 6,602 arbitrary detentions. In 2014 the total number of arbitrary detentions was 8,899 a new record and trends in 2015 point to that number being met or exceeded by the Castro regime's repressive apparatus.

Gerardo Hernandez was found guilty of conspiracy to murder these four men
Letting a killer go
The December 17, 2014 announcement by the President broke new ground in only one area releasing Gerardo Hernandez, a Cuban spy and terrorist, convicted of murder conspiracy of three U.S. citizens and a resident. Not only did President Obama commute the sentence but tried to rewrite history calling an act of international terrorism, the Brothers to the Rescue shoot down, a tragedy. Further attempts to provide a positive image to this dismal arrangement led to the Obama administration taking credit for the release of 53 political prisoners in early January but once the names were released it was revealed that 17 of the 53 had been released prior to the agreement and had nothing to do with it. This means that a total of 38 political prisoners were freed at the time. The policy of legitimizing the dictatorship, while marginalizing the democratic opposition, that began in 2009 was continued and intensified in 2015.

Patterns of regime violence worsen
This was not the only practice intensified. The United States and Cuba held secret negotiations for 18 months. Coinciding with the start of these negotiations were a series of machete attacks against opposition activists. On June 8, 2013 in Holguin, Cuba Werlando Leiva Batista of the Christian Liberation Movement was attacked with a machete on a public street. Later that same month on June 21, 2013 in Camaguey, Orlando Lazaro Gomez Hernandez, a member of the Pro Human Rights Party of Cuba stepped out of his home with a sign supporting hunger striker Luis Enrique Santos Caballero. Seeing this protest the president of the Committee for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR),  ran out of his home with a machete and attacked Orlando Lazaro with it, cutting part of his right hand and also striking him on the back. Others came out as the activist fell to the ground and began to kick him.

Sirley Ávila León victim of state security ordered machete attack
Cuban human rights defender, Sirley Ávila León, age 56, was gravely wounded in a machete attack in Cuba on May 24, 2015 by Osmany Carrión who had been sent by state security agents. She lost her left hand while raising it to block a machete blow to the head. She suffered deep cuts to her neck and knees, lost her left hand and the machete cut through the bone of her right humerus leaving her arm dangling. This was an escalation of previous machete attacks against opposition activists.

Looking the other way on terrorism and trafficking
Furthermore removing Cuba from the list of terror sponsors on May 29, 2015 while ignoring the Castro regime smuggling heavy weapons to North Korea (which is again in the news with a company in Singapore found guilty of transferring funds) and weapon shipments through Colombia and its links to international drug trafficking to satisfy the dictatorship’s demand in order normalize relations sends a dangerous signal. Politicizing the State Department’s human trafficking report to ignore sex trafficking in Cuba and the dictatorship sending Cuban workers overseas for profit compromised its integrity placing victims at risk. These unilateral concessions ignore realities on the ground and undermine the credibility of the United States.

Rosa Maria Payá being warned to keep quiet by State Department spokesman
Crudely snubbing dissidents and empowering dictatorship
On July 20, 2015 Cuban human rights defender Rosa Maria Payá attended a press conference at the State Department, with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Castro's foreign minister Bruno Rodriguez. She had proper accreditation as a member of the press. Rear Admiral John Kirby,  the State Department spokesman, took Rosa Maria aside and warned her that she would be physically removed if Rosa asked any questions during the press conference.

 Apparently this was not a fluke but also a harbinger of the new status quo for Cuban democrats dealing with the new embassy. Independent journalist Iván García reported in August of 2015 that the Embassy of the United States in Cuba was no longer credentialing independent journalists but telling them to go to the International Press Center of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, located at 23rd and O, in Havana's Vedado. This is a ministry of the Castro regime that systematically denies independent Cuban journalists accreditation and in practice since July of 2015 has barred them from events at the American embassy.

On August 14, 2015 Secretary of State John Kerry presided over the flag raising ceremony at U.S. Embassy in Havana, Cuba and at the same time that he said that they would not give Cuba a pass on human rights did not invite any Cuban human rights defenders to the official event.  The State Department argued that it was a government to government affair and that there was not enough space to accommodate the dissidents but would meet with them at an informal gathering separately. However, the State Department did accommodate a plane load of "entrepreneurs and Cuban American activists" to fly down with Secretary Kerry and his official delegation with a planeload of them. The "activists" support the Obama administration's Cuba policy and are advocates of lifting sanctions on the dictatorship. Furthermore, Secretary Kerry did have enough room for Cuban spies who had been expelled from the United States by Administrations due to their espionage activities against the country.

Hypocrisy exposed

Exposing the State Department's claim that there wasn't room, CNN anchor Jake Tapper in a tweet observed that there was plenty of space to have invited Cuban dissidents. It wasn't space considerations but accommodating the Castro dictatorship that led to the non-invite of human rights defenders.

Activist Hugo Damián Prieto Blanco jailed since October 25, 2015
Old and new political prisoners
The Castro regime still has political prisoners. Long term political prisoners include: Armando Sosa Fortuny, Ernesto Borges Pérez, Pedro de la Caridad Álvarez Pedroso, Daniel Candelario Santovenia Fernández, Elías Pérez Bocourt, Raúl Manuel Cornell de la Rosa, José David Herman Aguilera, Miguel Díaz Bouza, Humberto Eladio Real Suarez, Claro Fernando Alonso Hernández, Santiago Padrón Quintero, Ihosvani Suris de la Torre. Some of them have spent over 20 years in prison. However the number of political prisoners are growing as they jail more dissidents such as Hugo Damián PrietoLaudelino Rodriguez Mendoza,   Geovanys Izaguirre and Andres Fidel Alfonso Rodriguez.  On the one year anniversary of President Obama's December 17th Cuba policy announcement at least three new political prisoners are currently on hunger strike. Vladimir Morera Bacallao has been on hunger strike since October 9, 2015 and his life is in danger. He was assaulted and jailed for anti-government messages on the front of his home. Alexander Palacio Reyes and Felipe Martínez Companioni both of the Pedro Luis Boitel Pro-Democracy Movement have been on hunger strike since December 1, 2015 protesting their unjust incarceration in Cuba.

Yuriniesky Martínez with his dad, son, and on (right) how he was found
 Castro regime's violently repressive observance of Human Rights Day
International Human Rights Day on December 10 alone saw 300 politically motivated arrests. The number of politically motivated arbitrary detentions for 2015 broke a new record crossing 9,000 in the first two weeks of December. Little surprise that Cubans want to leave and in the course of 2015 alone at least 70,000 Cubans have fled the island which is in dramatic contrast to the 7,000 who migrated from Cuba in 2009 the year Obama entered the White House.  It is important to recall that on the eve of the Obama Administration's Cuba policy announcement that a boatload of 32 refugees was sunk killing one Cuban and detaining the rest and on April 9, 2015 a Cuban state security agent shot a fleeing rafter in the back killing him and leaving face down for others to find.

When an adversary is willing to unclench his fist it is not always to shake hands: sometimes its to slap down hard those who are marginalized and unable to defend themselves in an act of repudiation, to cover up the mouths of free men and women before they shout out freedom and long live human rights as they are taken away or to grip a machete before attacking a nonviolent activist. Trying to call this a positive change is a fraud.

Fake Change in Cuba
Oswaldo Payá Sardiñas speaking on behalf of the Christian Liberation Movement in Havana on March 30, 2012 bravely denounced the fraudulent change that was then taking shape and that is being carried out today with the Obama administration's Cuba policy:
Our Movement denounces the regime's attempt to impose a fraudulent change, i.e. change without rights and the inclusion of many interests in this change that sidesteps democracy and the sovereignty of the people of Cuba. The attempt to link the Diaspora in this fraudulent change is to make victims participate in their own oppression. The Diaspora does not have to "assume attitudes and policies in entering the social activity of the island." The Diaspora is a Diaspora because they are Cuban exiles to which the regime denied rights as it denies them to all Cubans. It is not in that part of oppression, without rights, and transparency that the Diaspora has to be inserted, that would be part of a fraudulent change. 
What real change would look like
Oswaldo Payá in the same statement outlined that authentic change was contingent upon a principled path of action not economic determinism:
The gradual approach only makes sense if there are transparent prospects of freedom and rights. We Cubans have a right to our rights. Why not rights? It is time. That is the peaceful change that we promote and claim. Changes that signifies freedom, reconciliation, political pluralism and free elections. Then the Diaspora will cease being a Diaspora, because all Cubans will have rights in their own free and sovereign country. That is why we fight.
President Obama Cuba visit the apex of fake change
The crowning moment of the fraudulent change underway would be a visit by the President of the United States to Cuba. This is something that President Obama has indicated that he would like to do in 2016 if he sees enough "progress" in Cuba. However the focus in the media, academia and in government has been on the Castro regime making economic reforms, resuming commercial flights and human rights has been relegated to the back burner. The end result of this approach contributed to the untimely death of Oswaldo Payá on July 22, 2012 and continues to be seen today in Cuba with escalating violent repression against Cuban democrats and human rights defenders. Things have gotten worse across the board in Cuba and shows no signs of improving.
Independent journalist Lázaro Yuri Valle taken away December 10, 2015




Saturday, December 12, 2015

Over 300 detained on Human Rights Day and a focus on two taken away

Two people behind the numbers and the images coming out of Cuba

Independent journalist Lázaro Yuri Valle after Embassy of Ecuador
Reports still emerging from Cuba on the total number of arrests on International Human Rights Day with estimates now ranging at over 300 Cuban activists detained.  However in this blog entry will focus on two detainees, Rosa María Rodríguez Gil and Lázaro Yuri Valle Roca, out of the hundreds taken. She has a story that is compelling and he appears in a series of powerful images that speak volumes on the nature of the regime that presently exists in Cuba.

Rosa María Rodríguez Gil with her son Yosvani in 2015

Rosa María Rodríguez Gil, a member of the coordinating council of the Christian Liberation Movement was detained on December 10, 2015 at 8:00am  and was released the following day on December 11 at 4:00pm amid threats and insults hurled at her by state security agents. She spoke before the United Nations Human Rights Council on June 25, 2015.

Rosa María Rodríguez addresses UNHRC with Regis Iglesias
Rosa Maria had been threatened on March 16, 2010 that if she did not begin informing on the Christian Liberation Movement, a nonviolent movement that seeks a democratic transition in Cuba, that her learning disabled son, Yosvani Melchor Rodríguez, would suffer the consequences. She refused and Yosvani was arrested on March 19, 2010 and held in custody for nine months then subjected to a show trial and given a 12 year prison sentence. In Geneva she denounced this blackmail along with the deaths of Christian Liberation Movement founder Oswaldo Payá, and its youth leader Harold Cepero on July 22, 2012 under suspicious circumstances that have not been cleared up. Five years, five months and 12 days after he was arbitrarily detained Yosvani Melchor Rodriguez was freed on probation on August 30, 2015.  

Independent journalist Lázaro Yuri Valle Roca
Lázaro Yuri Valle Roca is an independent journalist and social communicator who lives in Havana, Cuba and has a blog of opinion about the political and social reality titled YurielConteston Blog. He posted the photograph above on November 30, 2015 after being roughed up by Castro agents at the Embassy of Ecuador in Havana when he was covering a story on Cuban nationals protesting the change in visa policy.


On International Human Rights Day he was surrounded by Cuban state security agents who covered his mouth in order to silence him as they took him away. Towards the end of the video below you can see him taken away and how other elements use the flags to try and cover up what is going on. However, other media in the vicinity captured the following images which have been pieced together. Cuban state security agents tried to silence Lázaro on December 10th but the photos that others took speak volumes on the repressive and totalitarian nature of the Cuban government in 2015.

Int'l Human Rights Day 2015 in Havana
 These are but two of the over 300 hundred activists detained today in Cuba for their exercise of free expression and independent journalism. This is not normal and demonstrates a totalitarian regime that fears its populace and maintains control through a combination of fear and physical coercion.