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Saturday, January 03, 2015

Artist Bruguera freed in Cuba after colleagues write in support

Artist Bruguera freed in Cuba after colleagues write in support
BY DANIEL WALLIS AND ROSA TANIA VALDÉS
HAVANA Fri Jan 2, 2015 6:18pm EST

(Reuters) - Cuban performance artist Tania Bruguera was freed on Friday
after three back-to-back detentions in three days, and after more than a
thousand artists worldwide signed an open letter to Cuban President Raul
Castro calling for her release.

The detention of the Cuban artist and other political opponents of the
island's communist government over recent days has tested a new detente
with the United States.

The dissidents, with limited public support on the Caribbean island, are
denounced by the Cuban authorities as being in the pay of the United States.

Bruguera third detention came when she went to a Havana prison on
Thursday to demand the release of other detainees. Earlier this week she
had planned an open microphone event the government called a "political
provocation."

Bruguera's mother told Reuters the artist returned home again early on
Friday evening.

Nearly 1,300 artists signed a letter to Castro saying they were
"profoundly troubled" by Cuba's reaction to Bruguera's event, which
never took place after her detention.

Bruguera, who divides her time between the island and art projects
mostly in Europe and the United States, told Reuters after the first
arrest that her passport was confiscated by Cuban officials.

"We firmly believe her detention, and withdrawal of her Cuban passport,
are inappropriate responses to a work of art that simply sought to open
space for public discussion," the letter said.

Cuban officials do not typically comment on police activity such as the
detention of dissidents.

Brief detentions are Cuba's standard response to opposition street
protests, but they have taken on greater significance after Castro and
U.S. President Barack Obama said on Dec. 17 they would restore
diplomatic ties, potentially bringing an end to more than five decades
of hostility.

Elizardo Sanchez, head of the dissident Cuban Commission for Human
Rights and National Reconciliation, told Reuters TV some 60 people were
detained in connection with Bruguera's thwarted Dec. 30 event in
Havana's Revolution Square.

With Bruguera's release, all are now believed to have been freed,
Sanchez said on Friday.

Obama's policy shift has drawn some opposition inside the United States
as critics argue the Cuban government now has less incentive to improve
its human rights record. A high-level U.S. State Department official is
expected to visit Havana later this month for detailed talks on
restoring diplomatic ties.

Castro has applauded Obama for Washington's stance, but says Cuba will
not change its one-party political system.

(Reporting by Daniel Wallis and Rosa Tania Valdes; Additional reporting
by Rodrigo Gutierrez; Editing by David Adams, Dan Grebler and Gunna Dickson)

Source: Artist Bruguera freed in Cuba after colleagues write in support
| Reuters -
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/02/us-cuba-usa-dissidents-idUSKBN0KB1FJ20150102

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