Posted on Wednesday, 12.11.13
Cuban dissidents say police detained more than 150 on Human Rights Day
BY JUAN O. TAMAYO
JTAMAYO@ELNUEVOHERALD.COM
Cuban police carried out more than 150 detentions of dissidents Tuesday
on International Human Rights Day and followed up Wednesday by carting
off the founder of a group that was holding a rare human rights
congress, according to activists in Havana.
Antonio Rodiles, founder of the group Estado de SATS, was taken away by
police Wednesday around 11 a.m. as he watched a group of children write
graffiti on the sidewalk in front of his home, activist Elizardo Sanchez
Santa Cruz said.
Dissident blogger Regina Coyula, who was in Rodiles' house participating
in the First Congress for Human Rights, told reporters that Rodiles was
detained when he intervened with police who were harassing his
girlfriend for taking photos of the children.
Yohandry Fontana, a pro-government blogger widely believed to be a State
Security official, tweeted Wednesday: "I confirm the detention of
Antonio Rodiles for attacking and insulting children."
Estado de SATS and two other independent groups sponsored the Congress,
which started Tuesday on the anniversary of the U.N.'s Universal
Declaration on Human Rights and was to end Wednesday night with a
musical concert.
Sanchez Santa Cruz, head of the illegal but tolerated Cuban Commission
for Human Rights and National Reconciliation, said he had information on
more than 150 detentions on Tuesday and was still receiving new reports
as of Wednesday evening.
All but a handful had been released by Tuesday night after so-called
"short-term arbitrary detentions for political motives," usually
designed to intimidate or harass dissidents and keep them from attending
opposition gatherings.
"That's not counting the harassment and other acts of vandalism because
there was a lot of violence by the forces of repression along the entire
country," Sanchez Santa Cruz said by phone from Havana.
Reports of more detentions were still arriving at his Havana office
Wednesday because government security forces shut down the cellular and
home phones of several hundred activists for much of Tuesday, he said.
The dissident group Ladies in White said its members alone suffered
about 130 detentions as they tried to stage street protests — not
tolerated by the government — in downtown Havana and the eastern city of
Santiago de Cuba, the country's second largest city.
Others were detained as they tried to reach Rodiles' home to participate
in the two days of panel discussions, video programs and art shows,
according to dissidents. Also detained were several members of the Cuban
Patriotic Union, an opposition group most active in the eastern part of
the island.
UNPACU founder Jose Daniel Ferrer said more than 130 UNPACU and Ladies
in White members were detained Tuesday in eastern Cuba alone amid a
string of protest meetings, marches and distributions of anti-government
leaflets and posters.
Several dissidents were injured when government-organized mobs and State
Security agents threw rocks at them, Ferrer said. Mob members and police
also made off with cameras, cell phones and cash taken from many of the
opposition activists.
Source: "Cuban dissidents say police detained more than 150 on Human
Rights Day - Cuba - MiamiHerald.com" -
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/12/11/3812885/cuban-dissidents-say-police-detained.html
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