PUBLIC AI Index: AMR 25/005/2009
30 April 2009
UA 115/09 Harassment
CUBA Edgard Lopez Moreno (m)
Edgard López Moreno, who was accepted as a refugee by the US government
in February 2007, has been repeatedly denied an exit visa by the Cuban
authorities. He has been on hunger strike in protest, since 14 April.
His wife was accepted as a refugee at the same time as Edgard, and was
given an exit visa in 2007; she now lives in the US, as do
Edgard'sbrothers and other relatives.
Although he has fulfilled all the Cuban migration authorities'
administrative requirements, Edgard has been arbitrarily denied his
right to leave Cuba. He told Amnesty International that the last time he
applied for a visa, in January 2009, the migration office where he
applied told him that State Security was blocking the issuing of the visa.
Edgard López Moreno believes he is being treated like this because of
his work as president of Coalición Juvenil Martiana (Marti's Youth
Coalition), a pro-democracy organization he co-founded in 2005.
During the two years he has been trying to leave Cuba, Edgard López
Moreno has been summoned to State Security offices several times. There
he has been told he must stop his political activities and give up the
presidency of the Coalición Juvenil Martianaif he ever wants to receive
an exit visa.
On 18 and 19 April, state security officers posted near Edgard's house
stopped all those who tried to visit him, and detained them. On 25 April
two state security officers went to his house and told him that if he
ended his hunger strike and kept quiet he would receive the exit visa by
July, but if he continued with his protests he would never be allowed to
leave Cuba. He ignored this warning, and on 27 April filed an appeal
against the latest denial of his exit visa; dozens of other Cuban
citizens signed his appeal in solidarity.
Edgard's wife, Rufina Velásquez González, was arrested in 2007 with her
parents because they had marched the 950 kmfrom Santiago de Cuba to
Havana demanding respect for human rights. Rufina and her mother were
later released but her father, an independent journalist, is serving a
three-year prison sentence for an offence known in Cuba as "social
dangerousness" for his participation in this peaceful march.
Denying an exit visa to Edgard López not only violates the universally
recognized right to leave one's own country but also constitutes an
unnecessary punitive measure for the peaceful exercise of his right to
freedom of expression and association.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The Cuban government is using the denial of exit visas as a punitive
measure against government critics and dissidents, who are regularly
denied their right to leave Cuba. Anyone peacefully exercising the right
to freedom of expression, association and assembly and challenging the
government risks being deprived of the right to freedom of movement.
Cubans wishing to travel abroad must obtain an exit visa called a
tarjeta blanca(white card). Although Raúl Castro announced in 2008 that
his government would ease travel restrictions for its citizens, the
situation has not changed. Independent journalists, human rights
defenders and political opponents have been denied their right to leave
Cuba. In 2008, blogger Yoani Sánchez was barred from leaving Cuba to
receive the 2008 Ortega y Gasset Prize for digital journalism. In 2005,
representatives of a group formed by relatives and friends of the 75
people imprisoned in a March 2003 crackdown, the Damas de Blanco(Ladies
in White), were not allowed to travel to receive the European
Parliament's Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought. Oswaldo Payá
Sardiñas, one of the leaders of the Varela Project, was awarded the
Sakharov prize in 2002 and was not allowed to travel to Strasbourg to
receive it.
RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as
possible, in Spanish or your own language:
- calling on the authorities to ensure that Edgard López Moreno can
exercise his right to freedom of movement, including by issuing him with
an exit visa and allowing him to leave Cuba according to his wishes;
- reminding the authorities that the right to freedom of movement is
universally recognized under Article 13 of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights and article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights to which Cuba is a signatory.
- expressing concern at the restrictions of freedom of movement that are
being imposed on government dissidents and independent journalist and
urging the authorities to end such restrictions.
APPEALS TO:
Head of State and Government
Raúl Castro Ruz
Presidente
La Habana, Cuba
Fax: +53 7 8333085 (via Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
+1 2127791697 (via Cuban Mission to UN)
Email: cuba@un.int (c/o Cuban Mission to UN)
Salutation: Su Excelencia/Your Excellency
Interior Minister
General Abelardo Coloma Ibarra
Ministro del Interior y Prisiones
Ministerio del Interior, Plaza de la Revolución, La Habana, Cuba
Fax: +53 7 8333085 (via Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
+1 2127791697 (via Cuban Mission to UN)
Salutation: Señor Ministro / Dear Minister
Head of Department of Migration and Foreign Services
Teniente Coronel Mario Augusto López Expósito
Jefe del Departamento de Migración, Dirección de Inmigración y Extranjería
3 y 22 Miramar, La Habana, Cuba
Salutation: Señor Teniente Coronel
COPIES TO:
Edgard López Moreno
401 No, 17 409 e/174 y 176
Rpto. Nueva Aurora, Stgo de las Vegas
Boyeros, C Habana, Cuba
and to diplomatic representatives of Cuba accredited to your country.
Document - Cuba: Harassment: Edgard Lopez Moreno (m) | Amnesty
International (2 May 2009)
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