Terrible fate of Cuba's imprisoned journalists recalled on eve of elections
Reporters Without Borders today reiterated its call for the release of 
24 detained Cuban journalists as the population prepared to vote - but 
not choose, as there is no choice - its representatives in national and 
provincial assembly elections to be held on 20 January.
In a news conference yesterday in Madrid, the press freedom organisation 
voiced concern about the especially alarming situation of some of the 
journalists held since the "Black Spring" crackdown of 18 March 2003. 
One of the victims of that crackdown who is now an exile in Spain, Cuba 
Press agency found Raúl Rivero, described the current plight of four of 
these journalists who are seriously ill.
The four are Normando Hernández González, the director of the Colegio de 
Periodistas Independientes de Camagüey (CPIC), José Luis García Paneque, 
the director of Libertad, a small independent news agency, and Adolfo 
Fernández Sainz and Ivan Hernández Carrillo of Patria, another 
independent news agency.
"The state of health of these four journalists, as indeed the situation 
of all the dissident journalists jailed in Cuba, justifies at the very 
least the suspension of their sentences and their release on 
humanitarian grounds," Reporters Without Borders said. "If the 
government agreed to this, it would show a minimal respect of human 
rights, in which there has been no progress since Fidel Castro handed 
over to his brother in July 2006."
The organisation added: "The 20 January elections should not raise any 
hopes. Political pluralism is not on the agenda and the only candidates 
that Cubans will be able to vote for are the already-designated 614 
representatives of the Communist Party of Cuba, the only political party 
that is permitted."
At yesterday's press conference, Rivero described the mistreatment, 
solitary confinement punishments and lack of medical care that Cuban 
detainees have to endure. He said García, who is serving a 24-year 
sentence in Las Tunas prison, in the east of the country, has suffered a 
shocking deterioration in his health as a result of his poor intestinal 
absorption, for which he is getting no appropriate food or medicine.
Hernández Carrillo is being denied all contact with his family and 
staged several hunger strikes last year that have weakened his health. 
Fernández and Hernández González have serious digestive and respiratory 
problems but the authorities refuse to cut their sentences. Fernández is 
serving a 15-year sentence, while Hernández Carrillo and Hernández 
González are serving 25-year sentences. The Cuban authorities never 
replied to Costa Rica's offer to give Hernández González humanitarian 
asylum.
A total of 20 journalists, including Ricardo González Alfonso, the Cuba 
correspondent of Reporters Without Borders and founder of the dissident 
magazine De Cuba, have been held without interruption since 2003, 
serving jail terms ranging from 14 to 27 years that were imposed on the 
absurd grounds that they were "mercenaries in the pay of the United States."
Since Raúl Castro took over as acting president, three dissident 
journalists have been sentenced ranging from three to four years in 
prison for being a "pre-criminal social danger. Oscar Sánchez Madán, a 
regular correspondent of the Miami-based Cubanet website who has been 
held since 13 April 2007 in Combinado del Sur prison (in Havana 
province), went on hunger strike on 9 January.
According to the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National 
Reconciliation (which is illegal but tolerated), Cuba's prisons 
currently hold a total of 234 prisoners of conscience.
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