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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

How life really is in Cuba

Posted on Wednesday, 05.20.09
How life really is in Cuba
BY ALEX SUTTON
asutton@iri.org

While the topic of future U.S. policy toward Cuba has been as hot as a
summer night in Havana, it's disappointing that more of the debate
doesn't focus on the lack of political and economic freedoms on the
island, or the status of the hundreds of political and social activists
sitting in Cuban jails.

For those who think that Cuba is heading in the ''right direction'' of
slow reform, look no further than the lightly covered news story that
the Castro regime is taking new steps to restrict citizens' access to
communication with the outside world. Specifically, the Cuban government
recently imposed new regulations that prohibit Cubans from connecting to
the Internet from local hotels, an access point that many activists,
students and younger people rely upon to e-mail, post messages and
receive precious information about life outside of the island.

Prior to their government's move to limit access to the Internet, it was
estimated that a meager 2 percent of Cubans had access to the World Wide
Web, a rate lower than Iran, Belarus or Zimbabwe. Despite the high costs
to connect -- one hour of wireless access runs about $10, the equivalent
of a half-month's salary -- hundreds of Cubans had been successful in
using these links to communicate their thoughts and opinions about life
and politics. World-renowned blogger-activist Yoani Sanchez regularly
posted her witty, satirist musings about life in communist Cuba via
connections from local hotels.

Denying free expression

Apparently Fidel and Raúl Castro had seen enough of this free expression
and decided to act.

Connecting to the Internet is the least of the problems, however, for
the estimated 250-300 political prisoners sitting in Cuban jails. They
have been sentenced for trying to freely express themselves, for being
entrepreneurial, for not accepting the rigid brand of Cuban communism
and for trying to be leaders in a country where only Fidel decides who
leads.

Forty-four-year-old Jorge Luis García Pérez Antúnez spent 17 years in
Cuban prisons for voicing his opposition to the Cuban government. Known
widely in Havana as ''Antúnez,'' he conducted a hunger strike during the
last few months to draw attention to the plight of his former cellmates
who are still serving terms.

Normally this type of action would have generated more jail time, but
Antúnez's high profile likely prevented the Castros from doing that --
so he went under house arrest, and his family and visitors are under
close watch.

Antúnez's sister Berta, who escaped Cuba in 2007, recently spoke on
Capitol Hill and told her brother's story. This event lent an important
perspective that we should all be considering as we weigh new approaches
toward Cuba -- the suffering of Antúnez and Cuba's other political
prisoners cannot be forgotten.

Last year a day of solidarity was commemorated to recognize and
contemplate the plight of Cubans whose liberties, human rights and
pursuits of happiness are limited in ways similar to other closed
societies such as North Korea or Burma.

Especially for those of us who are actively engaged in the debate of
U.S.-Cuba policy, May 20 should mark a day when we ask additional
questions about the real conditions on the island, and apply extra
thought to how changes in our policies will truly affect those people,
either for the better or for the worse. To engage in the hot Cuba debate
without factoring in people like Antúnez or the college students who
want to e-mail, Twitter and use Facebook is to ignore who we are as
Americans and what we believe in.

So no matter where you fall on the debate, use May 20 to learn more
about la realidad de Cuba.

Alex Sutton is the director of programs for Latin America and the
Caribbean at the International Republican Institute in Washington, D.C.

How life really is in Cuba - Other Views - MiamiHerald.com (20 May 2009)

http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/other-views/story/1056699.html

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