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Extended detention worries Cuban dissidents

Extended detention worries Cuban dissidents Wednesday, April 25, 2012 (04-25) 13:55 PDT HAVANA, Cuba (AP)

Cuban dissidents are expressing increasing concern about the detention of a man who was part of an earlier release of prisoners negotiated by the Roman Catholic Church.

De facto spokesman Elizardo Sanchez said Wednesday that Jose Daniel Ferrer has been jailed since April 2 in the eastern city of Santiago for unexplained reasons.

Ferrer was among dozens of political prisoners freed last year under a deal with the church. Most went abroad, but Ferrer and some others stayed.

Several have been detained briefly since their release, but none for as long as Ferrer and Sanchez says he's "very concerned" about his continued detention after three weeks.

Now 41, Ferrer was among 75 prominent intellectuals, opposition leaders and activists in 2003 on charges including treason. They deny the allegations

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2012/04/25/international/i135547D38.DTL

In Cuba, young people long for a way to access Facebook

Posted on Tuesday, 04.24.12

In Cuba, young people long for a way to access FacebookBy Franco OrdonezMcClatchy Newspapers

PINAR DEL RIO, Cuba — The 24-year-old volunteer shows off the seven computers sitting on wooden desks under a painting of Saint Juan Bosco in a small, 6- by 10-foot cement room at the back of the church.

Adalberto Malagon has taken several classes here. He learned how to write book reports on Word and crop photos using Photoshop. But what he really wants to learn is how to surf the Web.

Like many young Cubans, Rojas is frustrated that he can't access Facebook and Google like his peers around the world.

"We're ready," he said. "We have so much culture and in Cuba. There are many Third World countries with much less culture and education than Cuba that have had the for many years."

That may not come for years. Cuba, with its authoritarian communist government in control of the Web, has the lowest Internet-penetration rate in the Western Hemisphere, with just 16 percent of its population online. Even earthquake ravaged Haiti, the hemisphere's poorest country, has a higher percentage of its people on the Internet.

In Cuba, only government officials and foreigners can set up the Internet in their homes, and the vast majority of Cubans can't afford the fees charged at hotels, where an hour of Internet equals about a quarter of the average Cuban's monthly salary.

"Think about it," said David Gonzalez, 20, who sometimes sneaks onto the Internet at the hotel where his mother works. "For $5 an hour, it's not worth it."

Since taking over the presidency from his ailing brother Fidel, Raul Castro has moved to liberalize the country's economy. He's slowly introducing modern technology. In 2008, islanders first received the right to have private cellphones.

But the government has been more cautious with the World Wide Web. An undersea fiber-optic cable now connecting Cuba and Venezuela will increase the country's bandwidth, but service has yet to begin.

The Cuban government is concerned about the online potential for dissent and social mobilization, according to experts such as William LeoGrande, a Latin America specialist and dean of the American of Public Affairs in Washington.

The government feels confident that it has control of the traditional community, LeoGrande said, but it's less familiar with the techniques of a new crop of younger dissidents who've been inspired by the revolutionaries who used social media to start anti-government movements across North Africa and the Middle East.

The most famous Cuban blogger using social media to foment dissent is Yoani Sanchez, who publishes "Generation Y," which is translated into 16 languages. She sends out regular tweets about activism and her life on the island using text messaging from her cellphone. She has nearly 250,000 Twitter followers. She posts regularly each day.

"It's possible that I don't get there, that I don't have enough or life, please tell the youth of the future that their irreverence is welcome," she recently wrote on Twitter.

Opponents call her a fraud and an agent in the United States' political and economic war against Cuba.

The greatest challenge bloggers like Sanchez face isn't censorship, but getting online. Despite the restrictions, she and others bloggers are finding new ways to broadcast their reporting, by saving posts onto flash drives and sharing them to friends with access to the Internet.

In 2007, Ramiro Valdes, then the interior minister, called the Internet "one of the mechanisms of global extermination," but he added that it was necessary for continued economic development.

"This concern is exactly why Alan is sitting in prison," LeoGrande said.

Gross, an American from suburban Washington, was arrested and accused of being a spy two years ago for bringing satellite phones, laptops and Blackberry cellphones onto the island. Gross worked under the umbrella of a pro-democracy project of the State Department's U.S. Agency for International Development. He said he was bringing the equipment to the island's Jewish community, but he was accused of trying to subvert the government.

The island does have a limited intranet service that is more widely available. Cubans can surf local sites and open email accounts.

Yaremis Guerra, 18, takes classes twice a week at the Youth Computer Club near her home outside Havana, where she looks up music sites and exchanges emails with cousins in Texas.

"I get lost in that world," Guerra said.

Jakeline Diaz, 25, has access to email through work at a local near Pinar del Rio. But she really longs to get on Facebook. A colleague recently returned from a medical mission in Angola, where she had access to the Web and created a Facebook page.

"She has a lot of friends," Diaz said. "She puts up photos. I'd love to have friends from around the world."

On a recent afternoon, Gonzalez was walking with two friends through Old Havana to watch a televised soccer match that he'd learned about on the Internet at his mother's hotel. Since traveling outside the country isn't an option, the Internet is the best way to learn about the outside world, he said. If you asked every young person, he said, they'd tell you their first or second desire is to be able to have more access to the Web.

"No one has the Internet," he said. "Not the young people. Not the old people. Really the only people who have the Internet are the people with power."

email: fordonez@mcclatchydc.com; Twitter: @francoordonez

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/04/23/v-fullstory/2765624/in-cuba-young-people-long-for.html

Wife of top Cuban dissident says he launched hunger strike to protest his imprisonment

Posted on Tuesday, 04.24.12

Wife of top Cuban says he launched hunger strike to protest his imprisonment

The wife of José Daniel Ferrer García said he began the hunger strike to protest his detention.By Juan O. Tamayojtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com

Cuba's most aggressive dissident, José Daniel Ferrer García, freed only last spring after eight years in , has declared a hunger strike to protest his three weeks in custody without charges, his wife reported Monday.

Ferrer's wife, Belkis Cantillo, told activists that during her visit to Ferrer in a state security interrogation center in eastern Santiago de Cuba he told her, "they are killing me slowly" before a guard abruptly cut off the visit.

The dissident quickly shouted that he was going on a hunger strike, said Havana human rights activists Elizardo Sánchez Santa Cruz, who noted that Cantillo telephoned him around 1 p.m. Monday, shortly after the prison visit.

Cantillo's home and cellular phones appeared to be blocked, and El Nuevo Herald could contact her as of late Monday, but Yoani Sánchez also Tweeted that Cantillo had reported her husband's hunger strike.

Ferrer, 41, has been a thorn in the communist government's side over the past year, organizing almost weekly protest marches in his hometown of Palmarito del Cauto and nearby Palma Soriano, 18 miles from Santiago, which drew unusually harsh police crackdowns.

He founded the dissident Cuban Patriotic Union and worked closely with Ladies in White in eastern Cuba as they were repeatedly detained while trying to attend Sunday masses in the Santiago Cathedral and the Virgin of Charity basilica in the nearby village of El Cobre.

Ferrer was one of the 75 peaceful dissidents in a 2003 crackdown known as Cuba's Black Spring, and was sentenced to 25 years in prison. Cuba branded them as "mercenaries" on the U.S. payroll.

Cuban ruler Raúl Castro agreed in a 2010 dialogue with Catholic Cardinal Jaime Ortega Alamino to free the last 52 of the 75 still in jail. Virtually all agreed to go into exile in with their relatives, but Ferrer and 11 others insisted in remaining in Cuba.

Ferrer and 42 other dissidents were arrested April 2 during street protests in Palmarito and Palma. The others were freed hours later, but Ferrer was transferred to the provincial capital. The Castro government has made no public comment on his arrest.

Amnesty International, the London-based human rights group, last week added Ferrer to its list of "prisoners of conscience, detained only for peacefully exercising their right to free speech," and expressing concern that he might be forced to serve the rest of his 25-year sentence.

Sánchez Santa Cruz said Cantillo told him that the guard cut short her visit when Ferrer began to make political statements, because only family issues are supposed to be discussed during such meetings.

Cantillo described Ferrer as having lost much weight and quoted him as saying, "They are killing me slowly" in a reference to the notorious swarms of mosquitoes that plague the state security interrogation center, the human rights activist added.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/04/24/2764433/wife-of-top-cuban-dissident-says.html

Cuba: Further information: Cuban prisoner of conscience still held: José Daniel Ferrer García

Document – Cuba: Further information: Cuban of conscience still held: José Daniel Ferrer García

Further information on UA: 99/12 Index: AMR 25/015/2012 Cuba Date: 13 April 2012

URGENT ACTION

CUBAN STILL HELD

Cuban government critic José Daniel Ferrer García has been detained without charge for more than 10 days. Amnesty International considers hi m to be a prisoner of conscience, detained solely for peacefully exercising his right to of . 42 others at the same time have now been released.

José Daniel Ferrer García, the coordinator of the Patriotic Union of Cuba (Union Patriótica de Cuba, UNPACU) has been detained without charge since 2 April when he was arrested by security forces along with 42 others as part of a crackdown on government critics in the province of Santiago de Cuba. The others detained – who included his wife Belkis Cantillo Ramírez, a member of the protest group Ladies in White – were all released without a charge a few days after their arrest.

José Daniel Ferrer García is being held at the provincial headquarters of the Department of State Security (Departamento de Seguridad del Estado) in the neighbourhood of Versalles, on the outskirts of the city of Santiago de Cuba. He has yet to be charged and has not had access to a lawyer.

José Daniel Ferrer García was previously declared a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, along with 74 others who were imprisoned in 2003 solely for their the peaceful expression of their opinions. He was granted conditional release in March 2011, having served eight of his 25 year sentence. Under the terms of his release, he could be sent back to to serve out the remainder of his sentence. Amnesty International believes his arrest is an attempt to repress the peaceful activities he and members of UNPACU are undertaking in eastern Cuba and the organization is once again adopting him as a prisoner of conscience.

Please write immediately in Spanish or your own language:

Calling on the authorities to release José Daniel Ferrer García immediately and unconditionally, as Amnesty International believes he is a prisoner of conscience, detained solely for peacefully exercising his right to freedom of expression;

Urging them to cease immediately the harassment and intimidation of citizens who peacefully exercise their rights to freedom of expression and association.

P LEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 23 MAY 2012 TO :

Head of State and Government

Raúl Castro Ruz

Presidente de la República de Cuba

La Habana,

Cuba

Fax: +53 7 83 33 085 (via Foreign Ministry)

+1 212 779 1697 (via Cuban Mission to UN)

Email: cuba@un.int (c/o Cuban Mission to UN)

Salutation: Your Excellency

Interior Minister

General Abelardo Coloma Ibarra

Ministro del Interior y Prisiones

Ministerio del Interior,

Plaza de la Revolución,

La Habana,

Cuba

Fax: +1 212 779 1697 (via Cuban Mission to UN)

Email: correominint@mn.mn.co.cu

Salutation: Dear Minister

And copies to:

Attorney General

Dr. Darío Delgado Cura

Fiscal General de la República,

Fiscalía General de la República, Amistad 552, e/Monte y Estrella, Centro Habana

La Habana,

Cuba

Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country.

Please check with your section office if sending appeals after the above date. This is the first update of UA 99/12. Further information: http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR25/012/2012

URGENT ACTIONCUBAN PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE STILL HELDADditional Information

Prisoner of conscience José Daniel Ferrer García was granted conditional release in March 2011 following eight years imprisonment. He was one of 75 people who were arrested and sentenced following a crackdown on Cuban dissidence in March 2003. All 75 were adopted as prisoners of conscience by Amnesty International, as they had acted non-violently and were imprisoned under Cuban legislation which illegitimately criminalizes political dissent. José Daniel Ferrer García was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment in relation to his participation in the Project, which aimed at requesting a national referendum on democratic reforms. Article 31.1.4 of the Cuban Criminal Code states that conditional release allows a prisoner to see out the remainder of their sentence outside prison provided they demonstrate "good behaviour" ("buena conducta").

José Daniel Ferrer García was recently arrested in Havana, on 21 February 2012 and held incommunicado until his release without charge three days later (See UAs: http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR25/005/2012/en; http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR25/006/2012/en.)

The Patriotic Union of Cuba (UNPACU) is an umbrella group of dissident organizations, based primarily in Santiago de

Cuba, but also in neighbouring provinces of eastern Cuba. UNPACU seeks democratic change in Cuba via non-violent means.

Since UNPACU's creation in mid-2011, its members have faced constant harassment and intimidation form the Cuban authorities, including arbitrary detention. One of UNPACU's members, prisoner of conscience Wilman Villar Mendoza died in January 2012 following a hunger strike in protest at his four-year prison sentence following a summary trial. This repression is part of a general crackdown against dissidents in the eastern provinces of Cuba which has gathered pace since mid-2011 and has intensified since just before the Pope's visit to Cuba at the end of March 2012.

On 2 April, 100 officials from the Department of State Security and officers arrived at José Daniel's house in Palmarito de Cauto, Santiago de Cuba Province. The officers reportedly broke in and arrested him and his wife Belkis, along with four others. 37 other government critics were also arrested at the same time in Palma de Soriano and El Caney, both in Santiago de Cuba Province.

Name: José Daniel Ferrer García

Gender m/f: m

Further information on UA: 99/12 Index: AMR 25/015/2012 Issue Date: 13 April 2012

http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AMR25/015/2012/en/2e687a11-2467-49b3-a2f1-2eddaeae6b6d/amr250152012en.html

The Dream of Leaving Cuba

The Dream of Leaving CubaBy YOANI SANCHEZPublished: April 21, 2012

Havana

OUTSIDE the sun is blindingly hot, and in the immigration office 100 people are sweating profusely. But no one complains. A critical word, a demanding attitude, could end in punishment. So we all wait silently for a "white card," authorization to outside Cuba.

The white card is a piece of the migratory absurdities that prevent Cubans from freely leaving and entering their own country. It is our own Berlin Wall without the concrete, the land-mining of our borders without explosives. A wall made of paperwork and stamps, overseen by the grim stares of soldiers. This capricious exit permit costs over $200, a year's salary for the average Cuban. But money is not enough. Nor is a valid passport. We must also meet other, unwritten requirements, ideological and political conditions that make us eligible, or not, to board a plane.

With so many obstacles, receiving a "yes" is like hearing the screech of the bolts pulled back on a cell door. But for many, like me, the answer is always "no." Thousands of Cubans have been condemned to immobility on this island, though no court has issued such a verdict. Our "crime" is thinking critically of the government, being a member of an opposition group or subscribing to a platform in defense of .

In my case, I can flaunt the sad record of having received 19 denials since 2008 of my applications for a white card. I left an empty chair at every conference, every award ceremony, every presentation of my books. I never received any explanation, only the laconic phrase "For now, you are not authorized to leave the country."

But it is not only dissidents or critics who suffer these mobility restrictions. Hundreds of doctors, nurses and professionals whom the government values too much to risk losing know that choosing those professions means they will save lives but will be unlikely to see other latitudes. They have seen their families separated, their children go into exile, while they wait for the authorities' approval to leave. Some wait three years, five years, a decade, forever.

The blacklist of those who cannot cross the sea is long, and though the information is never published, we all know how the system works. And so we don masks of conformity before the watchful eyes of the state, hoping to achieve the cherished dream of crossing national boundaries. The exit permit thus becomes a method of ideological control.

A few days ago Ricardo Alarcón, of the Cuban Parliament, told a foreign interviewer that the government is studying a radical reform of . But we all know how the Cuban government utilizes the euphemism "we are studying" to buy time in what could become a wait of decades.

In reality, these same authorities are unwilling to give up this rich industry that brings them millions of dollars a year in fees for entering and leaving the country. The rumors fly but the locks never open.

A year ago, for example, as I was applying for permission to attend an event in , the news "broke" that Cubans would soon travel freely. When I asked the official handling my request if it was true, she sneered at me, "Go to the and see if they let you leave without a white card."

That same afternoon, as I was issued one more denial, my cellphone rang insistently in my pocket. A broken voice related to me the last moments in the life of Juan Wilfredo Soto, a who died several days after being handcuffed and beaten by the in a public park. I sat down to steady myself, my ears ringing, my face flush.

I went home and looked at my passport, full of visas to enter a dozen countries but lacking any authorization to leave my own. Next to its blue cover my husband placed a report of the details of Juan Wilfredo Soto's death. Looking from his face in the photograph to the national seal on my passport, I could only conclude that in Cuba, nothing has changed. We remain in the grip of the same limitations, caught between the high walls of ideological sectarianism and the tight shackles of travel restrictions.

Yoani Sanchez is the author of "Havana Real: One Woman Fights to Tell the Truth About Cuba Today." This article was translated by Mary Jo Porter from the Spanish.

21 April 2012

http://translatingcuba.com/?p=17702

Cuban Dissident Held Without Charges for Weeks

Cuban Held Without Charges for WeeksPublished April 20, 2012FoxNews.com

Havana – The opposition Cuban Commission on and National Reconciliation on Thursday denounced the fact that former political José Daniel Ferrer remains in jail without any charges being filed against him more than two weeks after being .

"He continues to be detained, allegedly under 'provisional imprisonment' in the political secret station in Santiago de Cuba, where he has remained interned, under cruel and subhuman conditions, since April 2," commission spokesman Elizardo Sánchez said in a communique.

Ferrer, who was among the "Group of 75" dissidents sentenced to lengthy terms in the spring of 2003, heads the Patriotic Union of Cuba and was arrested in Santiago along with other opposition members.

The commission said that as of early Thursday the formal charges against Ferrer had not been made known and he had not been assigned a defense attorney.

According to the text of the communique, the opposition figure is in "solitary confinement" and is being subjected to "a particular form of biological torture" given that he is being exposed to an "enormous plague of mosquitoes."

The commission also emphasized the "provisional imprisonment" of Bismarck Mustelier, whom it said is also a member of the Patriotic Union and "has been held in the high-security Aguadores prison" in Santiago.

As a member of the Group of 75, Ferrer was released on parole in March 2011 and was among the 12 opposition members of the Group who refused to to as a condition of their release from prison.

In recent months, Ferrer has been briefly arrested several times in Havana and Santiago, the province where he resides.

Cuba's communist government considers dissidents to be counterrevolutionaries and mercenaries in the service of the United States.

http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2012/04/20/cuban-dissident-held-without-charges-for-weeks/

Fidel Castro’s face on a cake for human rights campaign goes viral

Posted on Wednesday, 04.18.12

's face on a cake for campaign goes viral

Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro's face — minus mouth — is on a cake as part of a human rights campaign. Now, many want the recipe.Amnesty InternationalBy Juan O. Tamayojtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com

An image created for a prominent human rights group showing a cake with Fidel Castro's face, a thick slice taken out of his mouth and the words, "the voice of oppression," has gone viral on the .

The image was created for an Amnesty International publicity campaign that was cancelled "because it did not fulfill our requirements" — not to avoid offending Castro, Sharon Singh, the group's spokeswoman, said Wednesday.

"We believe in free speech," Singh told El Nuevo Herald by phone from the group's offices in New York City.

Created by the Euro RSCG Prague advertising company in the Czech Republic, the image was part of proposal for a publicity campaign marking the anniversary of Amnesty International's founding in London in 1961, Singh said.

It shows a cake in the shape of Castro's face, wearing his traditional olive green military cap and with a slice taken out of his mouth and chin.

A sign in English in the lower right corner says, "50 years together with you cutting down the voice of oppression" and displays Amnesty International's well-known logo of a candle wrapped in barbed wire.

Another image proposed by the Czech advertising agency featured Alexander Lukashenko, the authoritarian of Belarus.

But the image of the former Cuban ruler has been so popular, according to sources, that some people who saw it on the Internet have asked for a recipe for the cake — which appears to have layers of chocolate and vanilla.

Singh said Amnesty was not aware of any complaints from Castro supporters about the image. It was somehow posted on the Internet, she added, and "went viral."

An uncredited report published April 9 in the Chilean branch of Terra, a Web portal based in , said the image "ridicules Fidel Castro and brands him as 'an oppressor.' " Its headline said the image had "generated a polemic" but gave no details.

The report added that Amnesty International has been "especially critical" of the Cuban government headed by Castro's brother Raúl and this year "tried to intercede, without success, to allow Yoani Sánchez" to attend an event in Brazil.

Amnesty International describes itself on its Web page as "a global movement of more than 3 million supporters, members and activists in more than 150 countries and territories" who campaign against "grave abuses of human rights."

It is independent of any government, political ideology, economic interest or religion, it adds, and its operations are "funded mainly by our membership and public donations."

The Czech government, and human rights advocates in the European nation ruled by communists between the wake of World War II and the "Velvet Revolution" in 1989, have been especially active in supporting dissidents in communist-ruled Cuba.

The two nations have not named ambassadors to each other's capitals since 1993, since Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Diplomatic relations are carried out at the level of charge d'affaires.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/04/18/2755723/fidel-castros-face-on-a-human.html

Human rights activists say 1,158 Cubans detained to keep them away from papal events

Posted on Tuesday, 04.17.12

activists say 1,158 Cubans detained to keep them awayfrom papal eventsBy Juan O. Tamayojtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com

Cuban carried out 1,158 political detentions in March — mostlyto keep dissidents away from Pope Benedict XVI — the most since themass roundups during the Bay of Pigs invasion five decades ago, ahuman rights group reported Tuesday.

The report by the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and NationalReconciliation in Havana came a day after police once again detainedAndrés Carrión Alvarez, who shouted "Down with Communism" before thepope's mass in Santiago de Cuba last month.

The tally added fuel to complaints that the pope and Cuban CatholicChurch turned a blind eye to the communist government's human rightsabuses in their efforts to gain more space for church activities onthe island.

The Ladies in White have asked for a meeting with CubanCardinal Jaime Ortega Alamino "because the repression has grown worsehere in Cuba, and what we're seeing is a total silence on the part ofthe church," group leader Bertha Soler said Tuesday.

The 40-page report, which included names and dates for each detention,was the hardest evidence yet that the government cracked down ondissent roughly at the same time Benedict was calling for during his March 26-29 visit.

More than half the "arbitrary detentions for political motives" andhouse arrests reported during March took place in the days just beforeand during the papal visit, the report noted, in a clear campaign toblock their participation in papal events. They usually lasted a fewhours or days.

The total of 1,158 such detentions for the month, it added, was "thehighest single monthly tally in the last five decades, only comparableto the huge sweeps carried out across the country" during the failedBay of Pigs invasion in 1961.

At that time of the attack by CIA-backed exiles, Cuban security forcesrounded up tens of thousands of men and women suspected ofsympathizing with the invaders and held them for days in jammed sportsfields, theaters and other sites.

Soler said about 60 Ladies in White were during the papalvisit and only three managed to slip into the open-air papal mass inHavana March 28. They were relatively new members of the group whoapparently were unknown to security officials.

"It is very important that the church hierarchy, Jaime (Ortega), raisetheir voices so that the government will stop this repression," Solertold El Nuevo Herald by phone from Havana.

Emails sent to the Vatican media office and Ortega's office at thearchdiocese of Havana, seeking comment, were not immediately answered.

Commission leader Elizardo Sánchez Santa Cruz reported on the pope'slast day in Cuba that police had carried out 250 political arrests andblocked scores of dissidents' celular phones. Vatican spokesmanFederico Lombardi declared on the same day that he had no informationon blocked cell phones.

The commission's monthly reports have reflected a sharp increase inthe political detentions since Cuban leader Raúl Castro, reputed to bea pragmatist on the economy but hardliner on politics, officiallysucceeded ailing brother in 2008.

The "arbitrary political detentions" averaged 147 per month in 2010,then more than doubled to 343 per month for all of 2011 — with 796reported in December, 631 in January, 604 in February and the 1,158 inMarch.

Sánchez Santa Cruz told El Nuevo Herald last month that he believedthe increase in arrests was Castro's reply to growing popular demandsfor economic reforms deeper and faster than he's wiling to put them inplace.

His commission's latest report also noted that dissidents AndrésCarrión, Sonia Garro, Ramón Muñoz and Niurka Luque were beingprocessed for trial on various charges of opposing the government,making them "political prisoners."

In a separate announcement, Sánchez Santa Cruz reported that he hadconfirmation that Carrión was arrested again Monday. He was beaten andarrested for shouting anti-government slogans just before Benedictbegan his mass in Santiago, and had been freed April 13.

The second arrest came amid unconfirmed reports that he and dissidentAnyer Antonio Blanco were arrested as they staged a street protest inSantiago demanding the release of José Daniel Ferrer García, one ofthe most active dissidents in eastern Cuba.

Carrión had told the U.S. government's Radio Martí broadcaster overthe weekend that police had forbidden him from leaving his hometown ofSantiago, meeting with dissidents, making public statements or joiningstreet protests.

Ferrer García, founder of the dissident Patriotic Union of Cuba, wasarrested during protest marches April 2 in his hometown of Palmaritodel Cauto and neighboring Palma Soriano. Amnesty Internationalconsiders him a "."

He was sentenced to 25 years in during a 2003 crackdown on 75dissidents known as Cuba's Black Spring, and was freed last spring aspart of the Cuban government's 2010 agreement with the Catholic Churchto free political prisoners.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/04/17/v-fullstory/2754369/human-rights-activists-say-1158.html

Cuban prisoner of conscience still held: José Daniel Ferrer García

Document – Cuba: Further information: Cuban still held: José Daniel Ferrer García

Further information on UA: 99/12 Index: AMR 25/015/2012 Cuba Date: 13 April 2012

URGENT ACTION

CUBAN PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE STILL HELD

Cuban government critic José Daniel Ferrer García has been detained without charge for more than 10 days. Amnesty International considers hi m to be a prisoner of conscience, detained solely for peacefully exercising his right to of . 42 others at the same time have now been released.

José Daniel Ferrer García, the coordinator of the Patriotic Union of Cuba (Union Patriótica de Cuba, UNPACU) has been detained without charge since 2 April when he was arrested by security forces along with 42 others as part of a crackdown on government critics in the province of Santiago de Cuba. The others detained – who included his wife Belkis Cantillo Ramírez, a member of the protest group Ladies in White – were all released without a charge a few days after their arrest.

José Daniel Ferrer García is being held at the provincial headquarters of the Department of State Security (Departamento de Seguridad del Estado) in the neighbourhood of Versalles, on the outskirts of the city of Santiago de Cuba. He has yet to be charged and has not had access to a lawyer.

José Daniel Ferrer García was previously declared a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, along with 74 others who were imprisoned in 2003 solely for their the peaceful expression of their opinions. He was granted conditional release in March 2011, having served eight of his 25 year sentence. Under the terms of his release, he could be sent back to to serve out the remainder of his sentence. Amnesty International believes his arrest is an attempt to repress the peaceful activities he and members of UNPACU are undertaking in eastern Cuba and the organization is once again adopting him as a prisoner of conscience.

Please write immediately in Spanish or your own language:

Calling on the authorities to release José Daniel Ferrer García immediately and unconditionally, as Amnesty International believes he is a prisoner of conscience, detained solely for peacefully exercising his right to freedom of expression;

Urging them to cease immediately the harassment and intimidation of citizens who peacefully exercise their rights to freedom of expression and association.

PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 23 MAY 2012 TO :

Head of State and Government

Raúl Castro Ruz

Presidente de la República de Cuba

La Habana,

Cuba

Fax: +53 7 83 33 085 (via Foreign Ministry)

+1 212 779 1697 (via Cuban Mission to UN)

Email: cuba@un.int (c/o Cuban Mission to UN)

Salutation: Your Excellency

Interior Minister

General Abelardo Coloma Ibarra

Ministro del Interior y Prisiones

Ministerio del Interior,

Plaza de la Revolución,

La Habana,

Cuba

Fax: +1 212 779 1697 (via Cuban Mission to UN)

Email: correominint@mn.mn.co.cu

Salutation: Dear Minister

And copies to:

Attorney General

Dr. Darío Delgado Cura

Fiscal General de la República,

Fiscalía General de la República, Amistad 552, e/Monte y Estrella, Centro Habana

La Habana,

Cuba

Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country.

Please check with your section office if sending appeals after the above date. This is the first update of UA 99/12. Further information: http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR25/012/2012

URGENT ACTIONCUBAN PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE STILL HELDADditional Information

Prisoner of conscience José Daniel Ferrer García was granted conditional release in March 2011 following eight years imprisonment. He was one of 75 people who were arrested and sentenced following a crackdown on Cuban dissidence in March 2003. All 75 were adopted as prisoners of conscience by Amnesty International, as they had acted non-violently and were imprisoned under Cuban legislation which illegitimately criminalizes political dissent. José Daniel Ferrer García was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment in relation to his participation in the Project, which aimed at requesting a national referendum on democratic reforms. Article 31.1.4 of the Cuban Criminal Code states that conditional release allows a prisoner to see out the remainder of their sentence outside prison provided they demonstrate "good behaviour" ("buena conducta").

José Daniel Ferrer García was recently arrested in Havana, on 21 February 2012 and held incommunicado until his release without charge three days later (See UAs: http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR25/005/2012/en; http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AMR25/006/2012/en.)

The Patriotic Union of Cuba (UNPACU) is an umbrella group of dissident organizations, based primarily in Santiago de

Cuba, but also in neighbouring provinces of eastern Cuba. UNPACU seeks democratic change in Cuba via non-violent means.

Since UNPACU's creation in mid-2011, its members have faced constant harassment and intimidation form the Cuban authorities, including arbitrary detention. One of UNPACU's members, prisoner of conscience Wilman Villar Mendoza died in January 2012 following a hunger strike in protest at his four-year prison sentence following a summary trial. This repression is part of a general crackdown against dissidents in the eastern provinces of Cuba which has gathered pace since mid-2011 and has intensified since just before the Pope's visit to Cuba at the end of March 2012.

On 2 April, 100 officials from the Department of State Security and officers arrived at José Daniel's house in Palmarito de Cauto, Santiago de Cuba Province. The officers reportedly broke in and arrested him and his wife Belkis, along with four others. 37 other government critics were also arrested at the same time in Palma de Soriano and El Caney, both in Santiago de Cuba Province.

Name: José Daniel Ferrer García

Gender m/f: m

Further information on UA: 99/12 Index: AMR 25/015/2012 Issue Date: 13 April 2012

http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AMR25/015/2012/en/3ffa1de6-38d6-42ce-b7dd-8c706538dab6/amr250152012en.html

Cuban dissident’s wife says police may file charges against him

Posted on Monday, 04.16.12

Cuban 's wife says may file charges against him

The wife of a dissident who was freed last year fears police will try to force him to serve the rest of his 25-year sentence.In this March 26, 2012 file photo, a man is taken away by security as he shouts "Down with the Revolution! Down with the dictatorship!" shortly after Pope Benedict XVI arrived to Revolution Square for a Mass in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba.By Juan O. Tamayojtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com

Cuban police want to file fresh charges against leading dissident José Daniel Ferrer García, freed last year after eight years in , which could return him to prison to serve the rest of his 25-year sentence, his wife said Monday.

Meanwhile, the Cuban man who shouted "Down with Communism" before a Mass by Pope Benedict XVI has said he planned his outburst "because someone had to tell the world what [Cubans] feel in a loud voice," Radio Martí reported. There were unconfirmed reports late Monday that police Andres Carrión, 38, again because of his comments to the Miami radio station.

Ferrer's wife, Belkis Cantillo, said police told her when she visited him in jail Monday that they wanted to charge him with public disorder for organizing street marches, and receiving outlawed financial aid from the United States.

Ferrer has been one of the most aggressive dissidents in eastern Cuban since his release from prison in March last year, organizing a long string of public protests that drew some of the harshest police crackdowns over the past year.

Founder of the dissident Patriotic Union of Cuba, he was arrested April 2 along with 42 others dissidents during protest marches in his hometown of Palmarito del Cauto and neighboring Palma Soriano. He has not been charged, and has no lawyer. The 42 were freed later.

The group Amnesty International issued a weekend statement saying it considered Ferrer a " of conscience, detained solely for peacefully exercising his right to of ."

Ferrer was sentenced to 25 years in prison during a 2003 sweep of 75 dissidents known as Cuba's Black Spring. He was freed, under an unspecified "extrapenal license," as part of the government's 2010 agreement with the Catholic Church to free political prisoners.

Cantillo and Amnesty said they feared that under the terms of his release, Ferrer could be returned to prison to serve the remainder of his sentence if police file fresh charges against him.

Police detained him several times over the past year but freed him after hours or a few days and never filed charges.

Havana human rights activist Elizardo Sánchez Santa Cruz said Ferrer's current 14-day arrest may well be the authorities' way of punishing him for his activism, and warning him of worse to come if he keeps it up.

Ferrer appeared to be in good and spirits during his wife's visit Monday to his jail in the city of Santiago de Cuba, Cantillo told El Nuevo Herald by phone.

Carrión, who was arrested March 26 after his protests just minutes before the pope started a Mass in Santiago de Cuba on the first day of his visit to the island, was freed Friday and spoke by phone with Radio Martí Sunday.

"I took advantage that the Holy Father was here and I saw that it was the best opportunity for me to express what I felt, which is what all Cubans feel," Carrión told Radio Martí, the Miami-based U.S. government station that broadcasts to Cuba.

Carrión had not participated in dissident activities before but said he "planned the action, as far as it was possible to plan," to "express my constitutional right to free speech."

Radio Martí said it interviewed Carrión on a public telephone because the government had blocked all the cellphones that dissidents had delivered to his home on the outskirts of Santiago.

He said he was not mistreated while detained, but that before he was released he had to sign a document confirming that he was forbidden from leaving the city, meeting with dissidents or giving interviews.

"I am still in prison. The only change is that they put me home. I am persecuted, monitored," he told Radio Martí.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/04/16/2752841/cuban-dissidents-wife-says-police.html#storylink=misearch

For Cuban Dissidents, an Open Phone Line

For Cuban Dissidents, an Open Phone Line

Prepaid Cellphones Let Bloggers Post and Tweet in Privacy, as ForeignSupporters Add Minutes to Their AccountsBy NICHOLAS CASEY

HAVANA—Cuban Yoani Sánchez became famous for sneaking intostate-run cafes to upload posts to her , which the Cubangovernment says is subversive. Part of that process is now a lotsimpler: She uploads tweets from an iPhone at home.

Mobile phones, once banned from Cubans' hands, are changing the faceand pace of the Cuban movement. They were made legal by Raúl Castro in 2008, though at first, high costs made itdifficult for most Cubans to make calls on the island, let alone senddata internationally.

But in the past year, Cuba's government has signed deals with severalcompanies that allow foreigners to add minutes to prepaid Cubancellphone accounts from abroad.

The measure was aimed at making it easier for outsiders to send moneyto the cash-strapped island. But contributions from foreign supportersalso have been helping dissidents ramp up their flow of messages tothe outside world, mostly through Twitter feeds updated via textmessages.

"If Raúl had known what a Pandora's box he was opening with this, hewould have never allowed a Cuban to own a cellphone to begin with,"Ms. Sánchez said on a recent day from her apartment in the capital. Asshe spoke, she posted a message with news about Jeovany Vega, adissident doctor she had received a tip about: "#cuba They've justadmitted into Artemisa the medic who was on hunger strike@DrJVega." (Dr. Vega ended his hunger strike on April 1.)

Cuban dissidents are some of the few independent political voices in astate where the Communist Party remains the sole legal politicalgroup. They span the spectrum from underground journalists like Ms.Sánchez to lawyers running secret libraries.

One recent day before Pope Benedict XVI's visit to Cuba last month,dissident José Daniel Ferrer was glued to his cellphone, taking callsand messages to tally detentions of activists ahead of the papalvisit. He posted the tally on his Twitter account, which has around2,000 followers. His estimates were soon picked up by foreign newsorganizations and human-rights groups covering the crackdown.

Mr. Ferrer says he doesn't usually know who is adding minutes to hisphone because the donations are made online, by unidentifiedsupporters. "Without them, the cost would be prohibitive for me totweet," he says.

Mr. Ferrer can send out posts by text message—but still has no regularaccess to the Internet to read them. But his posts circulate abroad,mainly among Cuban exile groups in Miami.

There are consequences for being outspoken. Mr. Ferrer's cellphone wasshut down during the pope's visit and he was by governmentauthorities on April 2, according to a woman who answered hiscellphone last week, and who identified herself as a friend of Mr.Ferrer. Since then, the line appears to have been disconnected.

A Cuban government spokesman didn't respond to questions about Mr.Ferrer's whereabouts.

Another government spokesman said there is of in Cuba.

Internet access in Cuba is controlled by the government, which decideswho can plug in. Only about 450,000 Cubans, or 4% of the population,go online, according to official statistics. The cost also isprohibitive for most Cubans—$6 for 30 minutes of Internet access in acountry where the average person makes about $20 a month.

However, the number of cellphone users passed more than a million lastyear and is growing fast. Like Internet access, the cost of sendingmobile messages remains high—about $1 for text messages sentinternationally and $2.30 for short videos or pictures.

Several foreign companies have partnered with Cubacel, Cuba'sstate-owned mobile phone monopoly, to allow minutes to be added fromabroad to Cuban cellphone accounts.

Ezetop Ltd., a Dublin-based company that works with around 200cellphone operators in emerging markets, says Cuba became its biggestbusiness last year. Chief Executive Mark Roden says $20 million wassent to Cuban cellphones from abroad last year via Ezetop, about 10%of its total business.

Ezetop operates with a U.S. Treasury Department license and isn'tsubject to the U.S. economic on Cuba. "We're interested inremittances from the developed world to emerging markets andcellphones are a big part of that," says Mr. Roden.

Others see a different opportunity. Diani Barreto, a Cuban-Americanhuman-rights activist based in , recently partnered with Webactivist group Telecomix to channel money to Cuban dissidentcellphones using Ezetop and other services. A website postsdissidents' names and phone numbers and invites visitors to addminutes anonymously to cellphone accounts. The system "allowsdissidents to get out information in real time," Ms. Barreto says.

Mobile phones also have caught the attention of the U.S. government asit tries to pressure Raúl Castro and his brother and predecessor Fidelby supporting Cuban opposition groups. Drew Bailey, a spokesman forthe U.S. Agency for International Development, said the agency had"supported similar efforts in the past" to add minutes to politicalactivists' cellphone accounts. The agency declined to comment on itscontinuing activities, citing concerns about dissidents' safety.

Write to Nicholas Casey at nicholas.casey@wsj.com

A version of this article appeared April 10, 2012, on page A13 in someU.S. editions of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: For CubanDissidents, an Open Phone Line.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304587704577333980517198896.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

On the road in Cuba, tales of woe and yearning

Posted on Tue, Apr. 10, 2012 12:38 PM

On the road in Cuba, tales of woe and yearningKevin G. HallMcClatchy Newspapers

ON THE CARRETERA CENTRAL, Cuba — "Subanse," climb aboard, I said repeatedly, pulling the right wheels of my eight-seat van off the dangerous two-lane highway that snakes hundreds of miles across an island considered off limits to most Americans.

Ostensibly, I was in Cuba to cover Pope Benedict XVI's visit. But over the week and across the length of the Ohio-sized country, I gave more than five dozen Cubans a "botella" — in Cuban slang, a ride.

My riders gave an unvarnished view of the country. They were farmers, housewives and doctors. They were school kids, half a baseball team, an economist and even a , who proclaimed herself to be a huge fan of Jack Bauer in the American TV thriller series "24."

The van was a lark. Waiting for my small rental car at the Havana for two hours — described to me as five Cuban minutes — the overworked rental agent finally offered me the huge diesel-powered vehicle if I'd get on my way.

If life gives you lemons, make lemonade. I spent most of the following week offering ordinary Cubans a ride in my gray Hyundai van — which often carried more passengers than it was designed to.

I don't speak with a gringo accent. Some riders thought I was Argentine, most were baffled and many were wide-eyed to discover their driver was American and a reporter to boot.

"I have an aunt in Florida," said Angela, who got in before Camaguey, a central Cuban city. Many others said the same, citing family members in Miami, Orlando and Houston.

A few passengers were nervous — perhaps because of my driving — and sat silently. Most were expressive but guarded, quieter when others were in the car. As the number of riders thinned, the conversation generally opened up.

To break the ice, I played Latin music on my iPod through the van's speaker system. In an early, surreal moment, four Cuban women belted out "Amame," a love song by Colombian rocker Juanes. It put to rest any notion that Cubans in the interior lacked knowledge of the outside world.

I left Havana at 5 a.m. sharp on a Sunday, a good day to travel because people are trying to hitch rides home after weekend visits. I was led out of Havana by a cab driver I paid to get me to the Carretera Nacional, the national highway that is the first stretch of the Carretera Central, or Central Highway.

At the start, the drive looked promising enough, four lanes of completely empty highway. About 20 minutes in, however, the four lanes became two with no advance warning. The only indication of roadwork was the metal barriers — not visible in darkness — that I nearly hit skidding at 70 mph.

Minutes later, I drove over a hole so deep that my head hit the roof as the seatbelt snapped tight. And soon after, there was fog so thick you couldn't see three cars lengths ahead. It was a tough start.

About four hours in, I got on the narrow Carretera Central. Imagine a two-lane back road in Anywhere USA. Now imagine it rutted with deep potholes. This was my road, and my starting point for picking up riders.

Hitchhiking is about the only way to get around outside Cuban cities. Gasoline costs about what it does in the United States. Most Cubans don't have cars. Most earn a monthly government salary of less than $20. Getting from Point A to Point B requires patience, lots of it. The central highway is clogged with horse buggies, ox carts and tractors pulling wagonloads of people.

Cuba differs from the rest of Latin America in that there aren't shops and stalls along the roadside with people eking out a living in sundry small businesses. This sort of self-employment has only just been legalized in Cuba, which officially disdains the private sector, so it isn't widespread yet.

Instead, the Cuban roadside is mostly bare, with occasional in-home restaurants — known as "paladares" — and a whole bunch of revolutionary billboards.

One mocked the U.S. financial crisis with a downward plunging red line on a financial chart. Others called for the release of five Cuban spies jailed in the United States. And some were just plain odd.

"Socialism: Homework for the Free Man," read one confounding sign. Another, near an abandoned workers dormitory, read, "Fidel, yes we did it." My personal favorite was at an ecological reserve, declaring, "Nature is Revolution." Huh?

Sometimes subtly, sometimes directly, I asked the same questions of all my passengers. How do they feel about the newly announced economic openings? Are they better or worse off than before? What do they think of ?

If they weren't too nervous, I asked what would come after the deaths of Fidel, 85, and Raul, soon to be 81. They've ruled Cuba for 53 years, 50 of them under a U.S. trade . Simple math says their end is near. And I asked what'll happen if 's cancer-stricken president, Hugo , dies? He's helped keep Cuba afloat with cheap oil.

What I was after was this: Is Cuba ripe for an Arab Spring, where people can't stand it anymore and take to the streets? Has the government lost its moral authority? Is it at risk of collapse from within?

Most riders expected continuity, post-Castro brothers. An exception was Carlos, a paramedic picked up outside Havana late in the week on the way east along the northwestern coastline.

"The day that they both die will be the day that the country reclaims its real liberty," he said, adding, "Cubans want the same rights as the people who live closest to us, in the United States."

Carlos, 52, said he was among legions of Cubans who tried to make it to U.S. shores by raft. He was picked up by the U.S. Coast Guard seven miles off Florida and returned during the 1990s.

"We're living in a country of lies," he said, angry that tourists can come to Cuba and enjoy a parallel currency, while ordinary Cubans cannot travel.

Franklin, an eloquent economics-trained restaurant worker in his 30s, spoke passionately about his hope for change.

"In every country there are distinct parties because not everyone has the same thought, the same ideology. There are Republicans and Democrats in your country," he said indignantly. "Here there's just one party, there's no party that is in opposition. When we analyze it, it's as if we are all of the same mindset — and of course it's not like that. But what can we do?"

Asked if the eventual deaths of the Castro brothers might lead people to spontaneously take to the streets, Franklin wasn't optimistic.

"We are like zombies. We walk, but we don't know what our rights are, our duties are, what we should think. What we're presented is how we think," he said, not hopeful that the dissident movement has much influence. "If 1,000 or 2,000 people (out of 11 million) think like this, it won't change anything."

Most of the riders expected things to stay the same, however. That's because the structure of governance has been in place for five decades. Local and regional party bosses and secret have a vested interest in continuity, they suggested.

In the eastern city of Holguin, I was talking with a former soldier, Reynaldo Gonzalez, a jack of all trades, when he paused to take stock of a middle-aged man he said was a secret police officer who'd scooted up a park bench to eavesdrop on our conversation.

Gonzalez was pro-regime and referred to Miami Cubans as "gusanos," or worms. He vowed that Cubans on the island can withstand any U.S. invasion, but he acknowledged he's worried that if Chavez dies or is defeated in October elections there'll be a repeat of the early 1990s after Soviet funding disappeared, when life in Cuba was particularly hard.

"We will have to tighten our belts," he said somberly.

A woman named Milagros did fear the coming change. She spoke bluntly and then, remembering she's in Cuba, asked me to turn off the recorder and begged that I not mention her profession or her city because "everybody knows I complain."

Milagros feared a harder line after the ailing Fidel passes. His brother Raul has ruled since 2006, but Fidel looms large still.

"Raul is not passive like Fidel. Fidel, all he wanted was discussion of ideas, like he says, a battle of ideas: no war, no arms. But Raul is more aggressive," she said, adding, "It really scares me. It really scares me that Fidel will die."

Not one passenger could name a person they expected to succeed the Castro brothers. Until their ouster in 2009, two names were frequently cited in and out of Cuba — Carlos Lage, who was de facto prime minister, and Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque. Fidel Castro famously accused them of falling under the spell of the "honey of power." (Cubans joke that the pair belong to the Pajama Party, since they now cool their heels at home.)

The police presence in Cuba remains quite visible. There are checkpoints in every town along the highway. Having traveled extensively behind the Iron Curtain before the fall of the Berlin Wall, it felt familiar. It wasn't a menacing police presence, just a constant one.

Hard times dominated almost every conversation with passengers. They complained about how tough it is with rising prices and shortages of milk and other essentials. They complained about the government cutting back subsidies and slashing government jobs.

Angela, a poor white woman from the interior, said her kids, ages 11, 9 and 2, don't know yet what ice cream tastes like. The government no longer provides subsidies for milk for children older than 8, she said. Angela gets a 30-peso-per-child subsidy, roughly about $1.50 a month.

"What do you think a mother can do to feed her kids with that money? It's not even enough to pay for the milk the state sells!" she said bitterly. Her husband divorced her, and Yaritza, a tall black woman who hopped into the van at the same time, urged Angela to seek a husband with a cow.

Cattle are the property of the state. A 2008 report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture said Cuba's cattle population is at least 20 percent less than it was at the time of the Cuban Revolution in 1959. Killing a cow carries a prison sentence of four to 10 years, according to the penal judge I picked up later in the week.

Yaritza complained that Cubans every day are forced to make unpleasant tradeoffs.

"With what they pay us, we can't live. If you eat, you can't dress yourself. And if you dress yourself, you can't eat," she said. "Food prices are very high, and clothes, don't even mention it."

What about those economic reforms getting headlines outside Cuba?

"It's helped economically, but you need money to invest to start up something you can do later," said Angela. "The self-employed must have startup money. And for those of us who don't, what can we do?"

I ask about government plans to adapt microfinance — small loans, often to poor women, which have proven successful in Bangladesh and other developing nations. None of my passengers had caught wind of this idea yet.

All across the central plains of Cuba, the plains were, well, plain. I was traveling in the dry season, a six-month period that generally ends with May showers. Parts of Cuba are in a five-year drought, so some cattle and horses in this region were clearly bordering on starvation.

Their rib cages protruded through their sagging skin as they foraged for anything green. I sent a picture of one cow home to my 10-year-old daughter when I reached Santiago to cover Pope Benedict.

"DAD call animal control it's neglected!!!!!!!" she wrote back with the innocence of a grade-school student.

Elcio Cabrera, a poor farmer with red eyes and the stink alcohol wafting from every pore, climbed aboard in Bayamo, an eastern city.

"You've got to work real hard to get food on the table for your family," he said of the current hardship, offering guava and other fruit before stealing my spare shoes upon exit.

During the eventful week at the wheel, I sat in on a pickup baseball game near Bayamo, with barefooted players as entertaining as any major league game. I gave eight kids a ride in Biran, the birthplace of Fidel and Raul. I happened upon a horrific car crash in Holguin that left me in a "there but for the grace of God go I" mood. Cuba's accident mortality rate was 14.5 per 100,000 citizens in 2009, unusually high given how few vehicles there are in the country but almost half what is was in the 1980s. In 2010, the comparable rate was 11.4 per 100,000 in the United States — where nearly all households have a car.

Back in Havana, I reflected on how much was squeezed into a short trip, trying to match so many names to so many conversations.

I was most struck by the warmth of the Cuban people. Three or four strangers climbed in, and within 10 minutes they were talking to each other as if they'd been lifelong friends.

There's a lot to be depressed about in Cuba, where much in life is brought down to a shared level of misery, a lowest common denominator, if you will. Yet Cubans have come to rely on each other for five long decades in order to survive.

Passenger Milagros best expressed that optimism.

"We all know we are in a poor country, but within undeveloped countries, Cuba is a privileged country," she said.

http://www.kansascity.com/2012/04/10/3546621/in-cuba-hitchhikers-bemoan-a-host.html

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