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Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Freed Cuba Dissidents Say Detente Will Help Push for Change

Freed Cuba Dissidents Say Detente Will Help Push for Change
HAVANA — Jan 14, 2015, 12:01 AM ET
By ANNE-MARIE GARCIA and ANDREA RODRIGUEZ Associated Press

Newly freed dissidents have high hopes that detente with the U.S. will
help their push to bring changes for their country, despite skepticism
about Cuba's government and worry about the legal cases still hanging
over many of them.

Angel Yunier Remon Arzuaga, an amateur rapper known as "The Critic," was
arrested in 2013 after, he said, state security agents painted his house
in eastern Cuba with pro-government slogans, leading to a fight with
police. He was sentenced to six years for attacking state security.

Held five miles from his home, he was loaded into a car Thursday and
driven outside the prison, where he was released as part of Cuba's
agreement last month moving to normalize relations with the U.S.

"It's a hard blow against the regime when they themselves have to let
out people when they supposedly had proof that they'd committed crimes,"
Remon said. "It gives me the strength to keep demanding our rights and
freedoms."

Some members of the Cuban opposition have criticized the deal, saying
Washington didn't win enough concessions — an argument echoed by critics
of Cuba's government outside the country, such as U.S. Sen. Robert
Menendez, who called the deal "one-sided and misguided" on Tuesday.

"Will these 53 political prisoners be able to peacefully work in their
country for freedom and human rights — or will they be thrown into
Castro's gulags once again?" Menendez said on the Senate floor.

Eight of 10 freed dissidents interviewed by The Associated Press since
their release expressed confidence the decrease in tensions with the
U.S. will improve life in Cuba and make their activism easier. Only one
had a negative view of the deal.

Cuba has long described domestic dissenters as agents backed by the U.S.
and by expatriate critics of leaders Fidel and Raul Castro.

Remon called the U.S.-Cuba deal "a historic moment, an overwhelming
event for my country, and I feel very proud."

Despite the end of their jail time, the cases against many of the
dissidents have not been overturned, meaning they will not be able to
leave Cuba until their sentences run out. Some said the pending cases
would make them more cautious. Others said they would not be affected.

Miguel Alberto Ulloa, a 25-year-old Havana man arrested in 2013 for
painting anti-government slogans, said that he will stay at home until
the charges against him expire in two months but that he's "eager to go
to the street, speak out, show that I'm dissatisfied."

He said he had watched Raul Castro and President Barack Obama's
simultaneous announcements from prison on Dec. 17 and of the 100 or so
prisoners of all types watching with him, "some were happy and others not."

"Some thought it was a lie and nothing is really going to happen," Ulloa
said, but he added that he is optimistic it will bring change to Cuba.

"I think that the Cuban people really need something like what was
announced," he said. "Now I have to keep fighting and find the path so
that they don't jail me again. I'm not going to stop."

One of the released dissidents wasn't optimistic. Sonia Garro, a
recently freed member of the Ladies in White, Cuba's best known
dissident group, said she was highly skeptical that detente would
improve anything in Cuba, although she intends to continue her activism.

"I think this deal will give more power to those ruling Cuba, I don't
have any hope that anything will change, much less get better," she
said. "I am going to keep fighting as I have been for human rights to be
respected in Cuba."

Reinier Mulet, a 28-year-old Havana man, said he took to the streets to
paint slogans alongside Ulloa and was sentenced to three years in
prison. He said the charges against him would remain in force for a year
and authorities had warned him not to associate with "anti-social
elements," although they said nothing about further activism.

"I'm not afraid. I'm going to carry out the same activism as Miguel
Alberto. I'm thinking of holding meetings and making videos to tell
Cubans about their rights."

———

Associated Press writer Michael Weissenstein in Havana contributed to
this report.

———

Michael Weissenstein on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mweissenstein

Source: Freed Cuba Dissidents Say Detente Will Help Push for Change -
ABC News -
http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/freed-cuba-dissidents-detente-push-change-28210155?singlePage=true

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