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Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Report: Human rights not improved under Raul Castro

Report: Human rights not improved under Raul Castro
POSTED: 8:51 p.m. EST, January 9, 2007

Story Highlights
• Cuba has most political prisoners per capita in Western Hemisphere,
report says
• Living conditions in prisons and work camps are "inhumane and degrading"
• International Red Cross has been denied access to Cuban prisons since 1989

HAVANA, Cuba (Reuters) -- Respect for human rights has not improved in
Cuba under interim leader Raul Castro, though the number of Cubans
jailed for political reasons has fallen to 283, the country's main
rights watchdog said Tuesday.

Cuba remains the nation in the Western Hemisphere with the most
political prisoners in proportion to its population, the Cuban
Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation said in its
year-end report.

The group, illegal but tolerated by Cuba's communist government, expects
the civil liberties situation, from freedom of association and
information to the right to travel and self-employment, to remain
unchanged or deteriorate further because no reforms are in sight.

"The provisional team designated by Commander in Chief Fidel Castro has
done nothing to improve fundamental rights," said the commission, led by
veteran rights activist Elizardo Sanchez. "Cuba's government continues
to violate each and every civil, political and economic right," it said.

Castro, 80, was forced to hand over the reins of government to his
brother, Raul, 75, after emergency surgery for intestinal bleeding in
late July. He has not appeared in public since. Castro's one-party state
has long faced international criticism for suppressing dissent and
locking up critics.

Barring a "political miracle" short-term prospects for human rights are
negative and there is little internal pressure on the ruling bureaucracy
to change its policies, the commission's report said.

"Due to the oppressive and repressive nature of the totalitarian regime
and its enormous capability for social control, we cannot see any
factors or components that are able to exert effective pressure on the
government from inside Cuban society to begin a process of modernizing
reforms," it said.

Cuba freed dissident sociologist Hector Palacios in December because he
was very sick. The state appears to be resorting to intimidation rather
than prison to silence its opponents, including hostile protests outside
the homes of dissidents, the commission said.

It is also handing out shorter jail sentences compared to the prison
terms of up to 28 years given to 75 dissidents arrested in a political
crackdown in March 2003, of which only 16 have been freed, on medical
grounds, the report said.

Selective releases during 2006 reduced by 50 the number of political
detainees in Cuba's 200 jails and work camps, where living conditions
are "inhumane and degrading," it said.

The International Red Cross, which has been denied access to Cuban
prisons since 1989, recently said it would urge Havana to resume the visits.

The rights commission called on the international community to press
Cuba's government, in power since a 1959 revolution, to begin reforms.

http://us.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/americas/01/09/cuba.rights.reut/index.html

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