Sun Mar 18, 2007 2:35 PM ET
By Marc Frank
HAVANA (Reuters) - Wives and women relatives of 59 imprisoned Cuban
dissidents promised to fight on for their men's release on Sunday, four
years after they were jailed on charges of conspiring with the United
States.
Around 50 members of the group, which calls itself the Ladies in White,
marched along the main avenue of the upscale Havana district of Miramar
and called for March 18th to be named International Prisoner of
Conscience Day in honor of their loved ones.
Five members of Italy's Radical Party, including a national parliament
member and a European Parliament deputy, joined the women, holding a
banner that read "freedom and no violence for Cuba."
It was the first time in decades a group of foreign activists had joined
a dissident protest in Cuba, local observers said.
"We are democracy and human right activists and came here to ask for the
prisoners to be released," said European Parliament member Marco Cappato.
On March 18, 2003, Cuba began arresting 75 opponents and sentenced them
to long prison terms after summary trials. Sixteen of the dissidents,
including the only woman, have since been released for health reasons.
The women have dressed in white to attend church services in Miramar and
then march 10 blocks every Sunday since the arrests in unprecedented
defiance of the Communist-run government.
"So long as there is a single prisoner of conscience the Ladies in White
will be here fighting for their freedom," said spokeswoman Laura Pollan.
"Amnesty International declared all of them prisoners of conscience and
in their honor March 18 should be named International Prisoner of
Conscience Day," she said.
On Saturday, Ladies in White staged a 12-hour fast, taking turns sitting
in a makeshift jail cell they constructed in an Havana apartment, then
marched through the streets of the city holding flowers and handing out
white ribbons.
Pollan said the group planned four days of protest to mark the four
years since the arrests, despite warnings by authorities.
The Cuban government brands all opponents mercenaries in the employ of
the United States.
Local human rights organizations put the number of political prisoners
in Cuba at around 300.
No comments:
Post a Comment