Posted on Sat, Sep. 16, 2006
Exile activists make pledge of non-cooperation with Cuban dissidents
BY LAURA MORALES
llmorales@MiamiHerald.com
In 1962, Fidel Castro's police threw Angel De Fana in jail for being a
member of a pro-democracy group named after José Martí, the Cuban writer
and national hero.
''We had to hide to assemble,'' De Fana, who languished in prison from
1962 to 1983, said in Spanish, adding that he and fellow prisoners had
to endure years of forced labor. ``I was forced to cut stone in a quarry.''
De Fana and scores of other exile activists clogged the sidewalks of
Southwest Eighth Street between 16th and 13th Avenues Saturday to answer
a call from Cuba's dissidents and political prisoners asking folks to
not cooperate with Castro's regime.
Many protesters wore T-shirts bearing the words Yo No (I Don't) and
shook anti-Castro placards at drivers. A non-stop procession of
supporters leaned on car horns, waved at friends and pumped fists
through open windows and sunroofs.
''We're here to show solidarity with those who want freedom,'' said
Sylvia Iriondo, president of Mothers Against Repression and a passenger
in the only plane which survived the Brothers to the Rescue shoot-downs
in 1996.
''We ask all Cubans to say no to repression and to defend fundamental
human rights,'' she said.
Grizzled, cigar-chomping exile veterans filled Domino Park to capacity
while younger activists pounded the sidewalk and shouted slogans to
energize some of their more subdued elders.
Diane Cabrera, of Raíces de Esperanza (Roots of Hope), a Cuban youth
organization, said she wants to show support for her counterparts on the
island.
''I have to show solidarity with these young people who don't have the
same rights and freedoms I do,'' she said. ``I want to help them reach
for their dreams of a free pluralistic society.''
The drive for non-cooperation, launched on July 25, asks those on the
island to drop out of Communist organizations and to not ''snitch'' on
fellow dissidents or participate in actos de repudio, meaning ''public
attacks.'' The latter is a Cuban term used to describe the verbal and
physical assaults dissenters typically endure when they go protest in
public.
Cubans outside the island are asked to promote the campaign as widely as
possible.
The Cuban Committee for Human Rights, Agenda: Cuba, the Cuban Democratic
Revolutionary Forum, the Miami Medical Team and the Democracy Movement
are among the groups who helped organize the event and are spearheading
the non-cooperation campaign.
At about noon, the protesters clustered at the north end of Cuban
Memorial Boulevard, in front of the Assault Brigade 2506 monument, to
hear a taped statement from Jorge Luis Garcia Perez Antúnez, a political
prisoner at Kilo 7 prison in Camagüey.
''This is a call to the conscience of all, young and old, laborers and
professionals, soldiers and civilians,'' Antúnez said in Spanish.
``Refuse to keep cooperating with a repressive regime. Fight for the
rights and dignity of all Cubans.''
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