Prominent Cuban Dissident Arrested
Prominent Cuban Dissident Arrested
HAVANA – Cuban dissident Darsi Ferrer was arrested Thursday along with four other people as they were staging a peaceful protest in downtown Havana, according to information provided by the Cuban Human Rights and National Reconciliation Commission.
Ferrer and his associates demanded during a "small demonstration" that the Cuban government "respect the freedom of movement of citizens inside the island and (allow them to travel) abroad with the right to return to the country," the commission said in a communique on the matter, signed by its spokesman Elizardo Sanchez.
Also participating in the protest, besides Ferrer, were his wife Yusnaimi Jorge, Juan Mario Rodriguez, Ricardo Aguilar and Joaquin Sarduy.
The dissidents also displayed posters alluding to their demand during the protest mounted Thursday afternoon on a street corner in front of the well-known Coppelia ice cream shop, located in the El Vedado neighborhood, according to the commission.
A source close to the dissidents told Efe that none of the protesters has been released by Cuban authorities.
Ferrer, a 41-year-old physician, was released in June 2010 after being held in prison for 11 months without charge.
For several months, Ferrer has been denouncing the fact that Cuban immigration authorities have denied him, his wife and son permission to leave the country and travel to the United States.
http://www.laht.com/article.asp?CategoryId=14510&ArticleId=392648
Dissidents press Cuba to allow free movement
Thursday, February 17, 2011 11:19 am TWN, AFP
Dissidents press Cuba to allow free movementHAVANA — Dissidents pushed Tuesday for Cuba's communist government to include freedom of movement and foreign travel for all Cubans as part of upcoming economic reforms.
Also on the wish list for these opponents of President Raul Castro's government seeking to put Cuba on what they called "the beginning of the road" to democracy: allowing Cubans to buy and sell their homes; and allowing Cubans to invest along with foreigners.
Most of the suggestions are related to basic rights such as "personal property and individual freedoms" to let Cubans hire freely, open businesses and invest as foreigners can.
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/international/americas/2011/02/17/291442/Dissidents-press.htm
Cuban dissidents offered political asylum
Cuban dissidents offered political asylumSchwarzenberg calls for democracy activists to be releasedPosted: September 1, 2010By Cat Contiguglia – Staff Writer
The Czech Republic has offered asylum to 10 Cuban dissidents and their families.
In early July, the Spanish Foreign Ministry and the Catholic Church negotiated the release of 52 of 75 prisoners who were sentenced to 28 years in prison during a 2003 government crackdown on dissent. So far, 26 have been released, and six more are expected to be in the coming days, said Matteo de Bellis, a campaigner for Amnesty International's Americas program.
The final 20 are slated for release within the next few months.
Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesman Ji?í Beneš said it is still unknown if any of the dissidents will accept the offer, which was made after consulting with the Interior Ministry at the end of July.
"We are awaiting the response from the Cuban side," Beneš said. "The Czech Republic's long-term policy is to address the human rights issues in Cuba."
De Bellis said the first batch of prisoners was released to Spain, where almost all have stayed, but they may be granted residence visas in other countries. However, Amnesty International and the Foreign Affairs Ministry have expressed concern that the dissidents are not being given the option to remain in Cuba, which constitutes a "violation of their right to freedom of movement," de Bellis said.
"It's absolutely necessary that all the political prisoners be released, and at the same time it is equally important that they could have made the free choice of whether to stay in Cuba or make use of one of the offers to live abroad and start a new life abroad," Foreign Affairs Minister Karel Schwarzenberg said.
This is the first time the Czech Republic has made an asylum offer to Cuban dissidents.
The government crackdown that led to the dissidents' imprisonment, called "Black Spring," was a massive internment of journalists, librarians, human rights activists and democracy activists who were accused of acting as agents of the United States by Fidel Castro's regime in 2003. Negotiations for the release of the prisoners, which have taken place under the rule of Fidel's brother Raul Castro, followed a four-month hunger strike by journalist Guillermo Farinas, de Bellis said.
"They have been imprisoned solely for acts relating to their criticism of the one-party state," de Bellis said. "The definition of several crimes in Cuban legislation is so vague that it allows them to be used to curb dissent by a judiciary that is neither independent nor impartial."
Amnesty has termed the dissidents "prisoners of conscience," meaning they were imprisoned for peaceful exercise of their human rights, de Bellis said.
The European Union initially set sanctions against Cuba after the 2003 crackdown, but allowed them to lapse in 2008. Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos is touting the more conciliatory approach taken by Spain toward Cuba, citing the release of prisoners, and has called on other EU countries to soften their stance on Cuba. However, as reported by The Prague Post, Schwarzenberg rejected such calls earlier this month. Schwarzenberg was expelled from Cuba in 2005 for attending a pro-democracy conference organized by dissidents.
De Bellis said there are a number of prisoners of conscience still not part of the release plan, including Héctor Fernando Maseda Gutiérrez, arrested in 2003 for publishing articles that contained "misleading" information about Cuba and for being linked to media outlets in Miami.
Gutiérrez writes from prison, and in 2008 he was awarded the International Press Freedom Award by the Committee to Protect Journalists.
- Klára Ji?i?ná contributed to this report.
http://www.praguepost.com/news/5574-cuban-dissidents-offered-political-asylum.html
Report: Human rights lacking in five S. American countries
Report: Human rights lacking in five S. American countries
Five Latin American countries did not offer adequate human rights last year, an Organization of American States commission said in an annual report.
Colombia, Cuba, Haiti, Honduras and Venezuela were listed in the 2009 report released Thursday by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. All but Honduras also had been listed in the 2008 report. Honduras was added this year because of a military-led coup in June that toppled a democratically elected president.
"The situation in each of those countries does justify a hemispheric investigation," said Robert Pastor, a Latin America national security adviser for President Jimmy Carter in the late 1970s.
Cuba and Venezuela are often criticized by rights organizations, including Amnesty International and Human Rights Rights Watch.
In Cuba, the commission said, the government keeps citizens from "the full enjoyment of human rights, especially political rights, guarantees of due process and independence of the judiciary, deprivation of liberty of political dissidents, restrictions on the right to freedom of movement and residence, restrictions on freedom of expression, the situation of human rights defenders, and the freedom to associate in labor unions."
Cuba was led by Communist dictator Fidel Castro from 1959 until 2008, when illness forced him to permanently relinquish power to his brother Raul Castro.
Venezuela also comes in for pointed criticism, with the report saying that leftist President Hugo Chavez is using government institutions to squelch political opposition.
"In Venezuela," the commission said, "the full exercise of their rights has not been guaranteed to all people without regard to their stance towards government policies, and that the punitive power of the state is being used to intimidate or punish persons on the basis of their political opinions."
Human rights defenders and journalists cannot freely perform their occupations because of "numerous violent acts of intimidation carried out by private groups … together with the discrediting statements made by high-level officials against the media and journalists on account of their editorial stance," the report concluded.
The Chavez government also is engaged in "systematic opening of administrative proceedings based on legal provisions that allow a high level of discretion in their application and enable drastic sanctions to be imposed."
These problems are compounded, the commission said, by "a pattern of impunity … regarding cases of violence, which particularly affects journalists, human rights defenders, union members, persons participating in public demonstrations, persons in prison, peasants [campesinos], indigenous peoples and women."
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights issued a 319-page report in February that said Venezuela routinely violates human rights, often intimidating or punishing citizens based on their political beliefs. The report said a lack of independence by Venezuela's judiciary and legislature in their dealings with Chavez often leads to the abuses.
Venezuela and Cuba are the worst offenders, Pastor said.
"Venezuela has moved decidedly backward by the decisions of Chavez and, in many ways, is the most-serious case in the Americas," Pastor said.
"Cuba has pretty much stayed the same, which is bad," he said.
Colombia is included again in the 2009 report because of continuing abuses connected with the a 45-year-old war between the government and Marxist rebels, particularly the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.
"These include the participation of the paramilitary leaders … a persistent pattern of violation of the rights to life and to humane treatment, the situation of ethnic groups and intelligence activities against human rights defenders, community leaders, justice operators and the IACHR itself," the commission said.
Haiti, the poorest nation in the hemisphere, "suffers from grave situations of violence that prevent the proper application of the rule of law," the commission said.
In addition, the commission said, Haiti lacks the necessary institutions to guarantee human rights.
The newcomer to this year's report was Honduras, where a coup ousted President Jose Manuel Zelaya on June 28. An interim government ruled the nation until January, when a president chosen in November elections took office.
"Human rights violations are a direct consequence of the breakdown of constitutional order," the commission said.
The OAS panel visited Honduras from August 17-21, nearly two months after the coup.
"The commission confirmed during its visit to Honduras that … there have been grave human rights violations, including deaths, arbitrary declaration of a state of siege, repression of public demonstrations using disproportionate force, criminalization of social protest, arbitrary arrests of thousands of people, cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment and poor conditions of detention, militarization of the territory, an increase in instances of racial discrimination, violations of the rights of women, serious and arbitrary restrictions on the right to freedom of expression and grave violations of political rights," the commission said. "The IACHR also confirmed the ineffectiveness of judicial remedies to protect human rights."
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights is an autonomous panel created by the OAS. The commission consists of seven independent members who act in a personal capacity, without representing a particular country. They are elected by the OAS General Assembly. – CNN's Arthur Brice contributed to this report.
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/04/16/report-human-rights-lacking-in-five-s-american-countries/
Cuban ‘Lady in White’ tells of police repression
Cuban 'Lady in White' tells of police repression23 March 2010
Laura Pollan is one of the "Ladies in White", who has been demonstrating in Havana for the release of relatives imprisoned for their criticism of the Cuban government.
Her husband, HÃetor Fernando Maseda Gutierrez, 67, is an engineer and independent journalist and one of 75 people arrested during a crackdown by the authorities in March 2003.
He received a 20-year prison sentence after being convicted under laws that Amnesty International believes to be so vague that they are currently being interpreted in a way that infringes fundamental human rights.
Laura spoke to Amnesty International about the ill treatment she experienced when detained by police during a demonstration in Havana last week and her work on behalf of prisoners of conscience, one of whom died earlier this month following a hunger strike, in Cuba.
She began by describing a protest by the "Ladies in White" that took place on Thursday 17 March.
"We went to the Saint Barbara church in the municipality of Arroyo Naranjo. We decided to go to Arroyo Naranjo because Miguel Valdés Tamayo died there. We arranged a mass for him, as we did for Orlando Tamayo Zapata [who died on hunger strike], as they were the two prisoners of conscience who passed away.
"We also wanted to go to the house of Orlando Fundora, who had been on hunger strike. Although he had stopped it, we wanted to know about his health. His home is seven or eight blocks from the church. That is where they [the security forces] attacked us.
"We were walking with a gladioli [a flower] in our hands, as we always do, when they [government supporters] started shouting at us. We only replied by saying 'Freedom!'
"I have got many scratches and bruises on my body, because the police forced us onto buses. I still have a wound on my thumb.
"Once on the bus, they took us around many places. People were looking at us.
"We were carrying pencils and gladioli that we always distribute during our walks. Pencils saying 'human rights', saying 'Ladies in White'. When we were on the bus, I was throwing pencils and gladioli [from the window]. People could not collect them immediately, but I'm convinced that later, out of curiosity, they would go and collect them; this way they would know that those who threw them were human rights defenders, the Ladies in White.
"When we arrived home, there were many people around. They had placed police patrols to close the way. There were many people watching.
"A woman said: 'but if they are not doing anything wrong, the only thing they want is their husbands' freedom, why do they treat them like this?'
"They [the police] can do anything they want. People are too scared to join in [demonstrations].
"We are exhausted. Whilst our relatives are in jail, the Damas de Blanco have to have the strength to be able to call for their freedom, and get them out of those prisons where they should never have been put.
"I have been invited to Holland for a film festival, but I know that they are not going to allow me to travel, they are not going to give me permission to leave.
"They told me I should go to the Ministry of Education and ask the Minister to give me permission to travel. They told me that if the Minister gives me a permit, then it would be seen by the Office of Migration. This doesn't make sense. I am 62.
"I have been retired from my work [as teacher] for more than 5 years, so why does the Ministry of Education have to give me permission before seeking a further authorization from the Office of Migration? This is because they don't want to appear to be the ones who will not allow me to travel. The Ministry [of Education] has got my file waiting for an authorization since November 2005.
"I think they have had them [the prisoners of conscience] in prison for too long, seven years, just for wanting to say what they think, to enjoy freedom of movement, free association. They are not terrorists. They just defend human rights and want a better future for Cuba, a future of peace and democracy."
http://www.amnestyusa.org/document.php?id=ENGNAU2010032315963&lang=e&rss=recentnews
Cuba Still Fails On Human Rights
Cuba Still Fails On Human Rights
One party rule remains the law of the land, and when elections are held they are neither free nor fair.
The U.S. again urges the Cuban government to allow the Red Cross and United Nations officials to visit Cuban jails.
For 34 years, the United States has reviewed the state of human rights around the world, to provide the U.S. Congress with a record to help it make decisions on U.S. relations with other nations. Human rights begin with a fundamental commitment to the dignity that is the birthright of all people, and the report is a fair measure of assessing how a country measures up to that ideal, in the interests of its citizens and the greater international community. As it has so many times in previous years, Cuba continues to fail in that regard.
Since the 2009 Human Rights report was released, the island nation's government has made no effort to expand political freedoms. One party rule remains the law of the land, and when elections are held they are neither free nor fair. Citizens have no avenues to press for change. There also remain strict limitations on freedom of expression and freedom of movement. Internal travel is restricted and Cuban citizens are selectively denied exit permits to leave the island even for short trips. There is no free press. The government also censors and greatly restricts access to the Internet.
Draconian laws maintain state control, allowing for punishment of any unauthorized assembly of more than 3 persons, including private religious services. The law also provides for imprisonment for vaguely defined crimes such as "dangerousness," a pre-emptive arrest for a crime that hasn't been committed. The government has held numerous opposition leaders on such authority on prison sentences up to 25 years, even for engaging in peaceful political activities.
Underscoring the lack of change in Cuba, the release of this year's Human Rights Report coincides with the anniversary of the 2003 Black Spring crackdown in which 75 activists were arrested. Fifty-three are still jailed. Their imprisonment violates international human rights law, which as a member of the United Nations, Cuba is obliged to respect.
The U.S. again urges the Cuban government to allow the Red Cross and United Nations officials to visit Cuban jails. The necessity for this was sadly demonstrated by the recent death of prisoner of conscience Orlando Zapata Tamayo. And as always, we urge Cuba to release all of its prisoners of conscience.
http://www1.voanews.com/policy/editorials/Cuba-Still-Fails-On-Human-Rights-88838862.html
EU condemns Cuba for rights violations
Posted on Thursday, 03.11.10EU condemns Cuba for rights violationsThe Associated Press
STRASBOURG, France — The European Parliament voted Thursday to condemn Cuba for the "avoidable and cruel" death of a dissident hunger striker, earning a stinging response from Havana, which said it did not appreciate the lecture and would not respond to international pressure.
The European assembly called on Cuba to immediately release its political prisoners and urged Catherine Ashton, the EU foreign and security affairs chief, to push the totalitarian, Communist-run island toward a peaceful transition to multiparty democracy.
The vote, adopted 509-30 with 14 abstentions, follows the Feb. 23 death of jailed Cuban dissident Orlando Zapata Tamayo, who succumbed after an 83-day hunger strike.
Another opposition member, freelance journalist Guillermo Farinas, has been on his own hunger strike since Feb. 24. Farinas says he will continue the protest until his death, unless Cuban President Raul Castro's government agrees to release 26 ailing political prisoners.
The EU parliament said it was particularly concerned about Farinas, calling his condition "alarming."
"We cannot afford another death in Cuba. We call for the immediate release of all political prisoners," Jerzy Buzek, the president of the European assembly, said.
Buzek said Cuba has ignored appeals for increased democracy from around the world.
The Caribbean island has been ruled by brothers Fidel and Raul Castro since they ousted dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959. There are some 200 political prisoners in Cuban jails, according to human rights groups.
"We need action," said Buzek. "The Cuban government must respect fundamental freedoms, especially the freedom of expression and political association. Freedom of movement must also be respected."
Cuba, which had hoped for improved relations with Europe following Spain's ascension to the EU presidency in January, blasted the EU vote as hypocritical and wrong.
"Following a sullied debate, the European Parliament has just passed a condemnation resolution against our country, manipulating sentiments, distorting facts, deceiving people and obscuring reality," Cuba's National Parliament declared in a statement later Thursday.
"Cubans find it offensive this attempt at teaching us lessons," the parliamentary declaration continued.
It said Europe was in no position to judge Cuba given Europe's poor treatment of immigrants and the unemployed and its alleged complicity with America's treatment of al-Qaida terror suspects.
Cuba "rejects impositions, intolerance and pressure" from abroad, the Cuban parliament statement said.
The Cuban government considers the dissidents to be paid stooges of Washington, and says most – including both Zapata Tamayo and Farinas – are common criminals.
In Brazil, presidential spokesman Marcelo Baumbach said Thursday the government had received a letter from imprisoned Cuban dissidents asking President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to intercede with Raul Castro to revise their sentences.
Baumbach said Silva had not read the letter. It was unclear when the letter arrived.
The five-page letter was signed by 50 Cuban dissidents who asked for Silva's help in get their sentences reduced.
Baumbach confirmed receipt of the letter two days after Silva told the AP: "I don't think a hunger strike can be used as a pretext for human rights to free people. Imagine if all the criminals in Sao Paulo entered into hunger strikes to demand freedom."
EU condemns Cuba for rights violations – Latest News – MiamiHerald.com (11 March 2010)http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/03/11/1524294/eu-condemns-cuba-for-rights-violations.html
Cuba’s Doctor Abuse
Cuba's Doctor AbusePosted 02/25/2010 06:47 PM ET
Health Care: Remember Cuba's vaunted medical missionaries — those whotreated the poor abroad for nothing, supposedly out of selfless motives?A lawsuit shows they were nothing but a communist slave racket.
It ought to bear a few lessons for our own country as the role ofdoctors in the health care debate drags on.
Back in 1963, Cuban dictator Fidel Castro launched a much-praisedinitiative to share Cuba's medical doctors with the poor around theworld. The idea, of course, was to appear to be acting on higher motivesthan the profit-driven doctors in free societies. It was small scale andpropaganda-oriented.
But in 2003, Castro went big, and shipped 20,000 doctors and nurses toVenezuela's jungles and slums to treat the poor, doing the work"selfish" private-sector doctors wouldn't. Hugo Chavez touted this lineand the mainstream media followed.
Now the ugly facts are getting out about what that really meant:indentured servitude to pay off the debts of a bankrupt regime.
This week, seven escaped doctors and a nurse filed a 139-page complaintin Miami under the RICO and Alien Tort acts describing just how Cuba'soil-for-doctors deal came to mean slavery.
The Cuban medics were forced to work seven days a week, under 60-patientdaily quotas, in crime-riddled places with no freedom of movement. Cubanmilitary guards known as "Committees of Health" acted as slave catchersto ensure they didn't flee.
Doctors earned about $180 a month, a salary so low many had to beg forfood and water from Venezuelans until they could escape.
What they endured wasn't just bad conditions common inside Cuba. Thedoctors were instruments of a money-making racket to benefit the veryCastro regime that has ruined Cuba's economy.
"They were told 'your work is more important to Cuba than even its sugarindustry,'" their attorney, Leonardo Canton, told IBD.
That's because their labor was tied to an exchange: Castro took 100,000barrels of oil each day from Venezuela's state oil company in exchangefor uncompensated Cuban labor.
Most of the oil was then sold for hard currency, bringing in cash. Cubaalso charged Venezuela $30 per patient visit, meaning a $1,000 dailyhaul per doctor. But the doctors never saw any of it.
In a situation like this, it's pretty obvious that when the state getsinvolved in medical care — telling doctors whom they can serve, whatthey can charge and what they can treat — it doesn't take long forslavery to result. The Cuban government has told other doctors, such assurgeon Hilda Molina, that her brain "is the property of the state" asreason to control her travel.
That ought to be lesson to those who seek to reform medical care in theU.S. on the backs of doctors. Free medical care is never free.
Investors.com – Cuba's Doctor Abuse (26 February 2010)http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article.aspx?id=522289
Cuba Pastor Remains Behind Bars After Losing Appeal Right
Cuba Pastor Remains Behind Bars After Losing Appeal RightMonday, February 1, 2010 (10:08 am)By BosNewsLife Americas Service with BosNewsLife's Stefan J. Bos
HAVANA, CUBA (BosNewsLife)– There was international disappointment Monday, February 1, that the leader of a growing network of independent churches in Cuba has been denied the right to appeal his six-year prison sentence by the Supreme Tribunal in Havana.
Cuban Evangelical Pastor Omar Gude Perez, who leads the 'Apostolic Reformation' group, was convicted and sentenced on what Christians called "trumped up charges" of "falsification of documents" during a summary trial last July.
In a statement distributed by advocacy group Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) Pastor Gude Perez's wife, Kenia, said the court decision confirmed her belief that her husband's arrest and imprisonment in May 2008 was "orchestrated" at the highest levels of government.
Pastor Gude Perez was initially charged with "human trafficking" but a local court threw out the charges ten months later,citing a lack of evidence, trial observers said. The latest charge was brought against him a full year after his initial detention, CSW said.
"COUNTER REVOLUTIONARY CONDUCT"
The prosecution's petition also accused the pastor of "counter-revolutionary conduct and attitudes.""We are extremely disappointed to learn of the Supreme Tribunal's decision to refuse Pastor Gude Perez's right of appeal," said CSW's Chief Executive Mervyn Thomas.
Another key pastor in the Apostolic Reformation network is reportedly contesting government efforts to evict him from his home and confiscate his property. Pastor Mario Alvarez has appealed to the Supreme Tribunal to prevent what he believes is the illegal confiscation of his home.
CSW said that at least 30 other church leaders from the same network were detained in various parts of the country during 2009 and "several report that the authorities were threatening to confiscate their homes."Thomas said that the, "number of church leaders arrested recently clearly indicates a government policy to crack down on this independent religious group."
He said CSW has urged Cuban authorities to "immediately release Pastor Perez and strongly urge the Cuban government to stop legal harassment of the leadership of the Apostolic Reformation."
MORE DETENTIONS REPORTED
At least scores of Christians and other dissidents are known to be held in prisons in the Communist-run island. An island human rights group said this month that the number of political prisoners behind bars in Cuba fell by just five to 201 in the past half year.
The Cuban Commission on Human Rights and National Reconciliation said Havana's Communist government has increasingly used a strategy of quick arrests and releases to punish anti-government activists, contributing to a decline in the number jailed at any given moment.
That figure dropped sharply during the first two years of the Raul Castro government, falling from 316 in July 2006 when he took power from his older brother Fidel. But the commission said that decline has leveled off recently.
"Unless a miracle occurs, the situation of political, civil and economic rights in Cuba throughout 2010 will stay the same or get worse," The Associated Press (AP) news agency quoted Elizardo Sanchez, head of the Havana-based commission, as saying.
Sanchez's group recorded 869 brief detentions of opposition leaders and dissidents in the last six months. U.S. based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said last week that among those being harassed is well-known blind human rights defender Juan Carlos Gonzalez Leiva and his family.
DISSIDENT, FAMILY "THREATENED"
"In recent weeks, Cuban authorities have repeatedly threatened to force Gonzalez Leiva and his wife and fellow rights defender Tania Maceda Guerra to leave Havana and move elsewhere on the island. The authorities have pressed for the move under a draconian law that restricts freedom of movement."
The "harassment of Gonzalez Leiva offers further proof that the Raul Castro government is willing to do everything within its power to prevent human rights monitoring, including forcibly displacing the monitors themselves," added HRW Americas Director José Miguel Vivanco.
Cuban authorities have consistently denied human rights abuses and the existence of 'dissidents' on the Communist island, saying those persecuted are mainly "mercenaries" of the United States seeking to overthrow the government.
However a recent HRW report – "New Castro, Same Cuba: Political Prisoners in the Post-Fidel Era" -claims that Raul Castro has kept Cuba's "repressive machinery" fully active, "quashing virtually all forms of political dissent."
Independent Christian groups are also viewed as a threat to Castro's power base, several rights activists have suggested.
The report also cites the government's continued use of Decree 217 to restrict the freedom of movement of journalists, human rights defenders, and other members of civil society who criticize the government.
BosNewsLife – Christian News Agency » Blog Archive » Cuba Pastor Remains Behind Bars After Losing Appeal Right (1 February 2010)http://www.bosnewslife.com/11335-cuba-pastor-remains-behind-bars-after-losing-appeal-right
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