By MARC LACEY
Published: February 26, 2010
Friends and relatives of the Cuban activist Orlando Zapata Tamayo on 
Wednesday with a condolence book during his wake in Havana. He had been 
arrested in a mass roundup of dissidents in 2003. Mr. Zapata, 42, 
stopped eating solid foods on Dec. 3 to protest his detention, and died 
on Tuesday.
At least four prisoners who were arrested as part of a mass roundup of 
dissidents in 2003 along with the dead dissident, Orlando Zapata Tamayo 
— who stopped eating solid foods on Dec. 3 to protest his detention and 
died on Feb. 23 — have begun their own hunger strikes, according to 
human rights activists.
A fifth hunger striker, an outspoken psychologist and independent 
journalist, has joined them, according to activists on the island.
Freedom House, an organization that ranks countries on their level of 
freedom and considers Cuba "not free," called Mr. Zapata the first 
prisoner in Cuba to die by starving himself since Pedro Luis Boitel, a 
student leader and poet, did so in 1972.
The death of Mr. Zapata, who was not widely known in Cuba but was 
labeled a "prisoner of conscience" by Amnesty International, has forced 
Cuban authorities to engage in damage control.
Cuba's critics place responsibility for Mr. Zapata's death on the Castro 
government, with his mother, Reina Luisa Tamayo, accusing government 
officials of murder. Mr. Zapata, 42, had been denied water during his 
hunger strike for an extended period while being held at a maximum 
security prison in the eastern province of Camagüey, causing kidney 
failure, Cuban human rights officials have said. He later developed 
pneumonia at a Camagüey hospital before being sent to a prison hospital 
in Havana, where he died, activists say.
"The only way he would die is if the order was to let him die," said one 
former political prisoner, Eloy Gutiérrez Menoyo, adding that the 
authorities had forced nutrients on him during his own hunger strike and 
that they could have done the same for Mr. Zapata. "In my 22 years, I 
had to do more than a dozen hunger strikes. The only form of protest you 
had was a hunger strike."
President Raúl Castro said Wednesday that he regretted the death but 
that it was the United States government, not Cuba, that bore 
responsibility. Mr. Zapata was arrested in 2003 with 75 others whom Cuba 
considered mercenaries working for Washington. Mr. Zapata was initially 
charged with "disrespect," "public disorder" and "resistance," but he 
later received decades of additional jail time for what the authorities 
described as disruptive behavior behind bars.
"We took him to Cuba's best hospitals, and he died; we very much regret 
it," Mr. Castro said during a joint appearance with President Luiz 
Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil, according to The Associated Press. Mr. 
Castro added that the only torture being carried out in Cuba was that 
performed by the American military at the base in Guantánamo Bay, where 
detainees have conducted hunger strikes as well. "The day the United 
States decides to live in peace with us, all these problems will end," 
Mr. Castro said.
Granma, the state newspaper, did not mention Mr. Zapata's death, but it 
featured an article on Friday that deplored prison conditions in the 
United States.
Mr. Zapata's declining health was widely known as his hunger strike 
extended into its 11th week, and American officials said they raised the 
issue with their Cuban counterparts at previously scheduled talks over 
immigration held in Havana on Feb. 19, just four days before he died.
Hunger strikes, which are not uncommon in Cuban prisons, typically 
prompt reprisals by the authorities, said Human Rights Watch, citing the 
case of Yordis García Fournier, who stopped eating for more than a month 
in 2008 and was placed in solitary confinement and prevented from 
receiving family visits.
"Left with no other remedy for abuses, political prisoners routinely 
undertake hunger strikes and other drastic measures to call attention to 
their treatment," the organization said in a report released late last 
year that criticized Raúl Castro as being as aggressive toward political 
prisoners as his predecessor and brother, Fidel Castro.
Other recent hunger strikers include Alexander Santos Hernánez, a 
longtime activist, who went on a 23-day hunger strike in 2006 to put 
pressure on prison officials to grant him medical attention; and two 
detained journalists, Victor Rolando Arroyo Carmona and Juan Adolfo 
Fernández Sainez, who have stopped eating to protest prison conditions.
In 2009, after a long imprisonment, Jorge Luis García Pérez, who is 
known as Antúnez, began a hunger strike in his home to call for an end 
to abuses against political prisoners. While serving his 17-year 
sentence, he had founded a political prisoner group named after Pedro 
Luis Boitel, who undertook his fatal hunger strike while behind bars for 
criticizing the Castro government.
The most frequent Cuban hunger striker may be Guillermo Fariñas, who 
stopped eating for several months in 2006 to press for unrestricted 
access to the Internet. At the time, it was reported that he had carried 
out 20 hunger strikes since 1995.
Mr. da Silva was criticized back home in Brazil for not speaking out 
against Cuba's treatment of Mr. Zapata during his talks with the 
island's leadership, including a face-to-face meeting with Fidel Castro. 
Mr. da Silva expressed sorrow for Mr. Zapata's death but also criticized 
his use of a hunger strike, noting that he once started one, but 
suspended it, while he was imprisoned as trade-union leader decades ago. 
"I am against hunger strikes," he said.
Dissident's Death Ignites Protest Actions in Cuba - NYTimes.com (27 
February 2010)
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/27/world/americas/27cuba.html
No comments:
Post a Comment