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Thursday, March 25, 2010

Cuban dissidents praise Obama, government silent

Cuban dissidents praise Obama, government silent
Jeff Franks
HAVANA
Thu Mar 25, 2010 3:09pm EDT

HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuban dissidents applauded U.S. President Barack
Obama on Thursday for denouncing their ill treatment by the Cuban
government and said it had helped their cause.

Cuba

They praised him for standing by them in what appeared to be a new,
tougher turn for the president who has said he wanted to improve
U.S.-Cuba relations that went bad after Fidel Castro took power in a
1959 revolution and installed a communist system.

The Cuban government, which views dissidents as U.S.-employed
subversives, has said nothing about Obama's statement, issued on
Wednesday in Washington.

State-run press ran a column on Thursday by former leader Fidel Castro
praising Obama for winning approval this week of healthcare reform, but
pointing out that Cuba has had universal healthcare for more than 50
years. It appeared to have been written before the release of Obama's
written statement.

Dissident hunger striker Guillermo Farinas, in a telephone interview
from his hospital bed in the central city of Santa Clara, said Obama's
declaration would not have an immediate effect, but would help isolate
the Cuban government.

"That is very important, given that with a dictatorial, totalitarian
government as exists here, one must not negotiate. You have to condemn
and isolate dictatorships," he said.

Farinas, 48, was in the 29th day of a hunger strike seeking the release
of 26 ailing political prisoners. He has vowed to die for his cause if
necessary.

Obama called Cuba's human rights situation "deeply disturbing," citing
the recent death of dissident hunger striker Orlando Zapata Tamayo and
the "repression" of the dissident group Ladies in White last week during
marches protesting the 2003 imprisonment of 75 government opponents.

LADIES IN WHITE

The women, wives and mothers of the those arrested in the 2003 crackdown
were shouted down by government supporters and in one instance dragged
by police into a bus as they walked through Havana for seven consecutive
days.

"These events underscore that instead of embracing an opportunity to
enter a new era, Cuban authorities continue to respond to the
aspirations of the Cuban people with a clenched fist," Obama said.

Obama called for the immediate release of Cuba's estimated 200 political
prisoners.

"In name of the Ladies in White, I thank Obama for the statement
criticizing the government," said Berta Soler, whose husband Angel Moya
was arrested in the 2003 crackdown and is serving a 20-year sentence.

"It is very important to count on the solidarity of international
personalities, and on Obama in particular, raising their voice asking
for respect of human rights," she said.

Former political prisoner Oscar Espinosa Chepe also thanked Obama for
the "strong show of support" and accused the government of rejecting
Obama's overtures because "totalitarianism needs confrontation to
justify repression."

Obama's has slightly eased the long-standing U.S. trade embargo toward
Cuba by lifting restrictions on Cuban American travel to the island and
initiating talks on migration issues and resumption of direct mail service.

He has pegged further progress to Cuba releasing political prisoners and
improving human rights.

Cuba, which says it is the victim of 50 years of U.S. aggression, has
complained that Obama has done too little to bring about rapprochement.

After a brief warming, relations turned rocky again when Cuba detained a
U.S. contractor in December and accused him of working in "espionage
services."

The contractor, Alan Gross, remains in jail without charges. The United
States has said he was only in Cuba to expand Internet services for
Jewish groups, but admitted he entered the island on a tourist visa that
would not permit such work.

His work was funded under U.S. programs aimed at promoting democracy in
Cuba, which Cuban leaders view as part of the long U.S. campaign to
topple their government.

Obama did not mention Gross in his statement.

(Additional reporting by Nelson Acosta and Esteban Israel; Editing by
Tom Brown and Philip Barbara)

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE62O4LE20100325

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