Activist: Cuban backer of Ladies in White jailed
By WILL WEISSERT
Associated Press Writer
HAVANA -- An independent Cuban journalist with ties to the Ladies in 
White dissident group has been sentenced to 20 months in prison for 
allegedly mistreating her adult daughter, a veteran island human rights 
leader said Thursday.
Dania Virgen Garcia was arrested on April 20 and sentenced three days 
later after her daughter - apparently angry at her mother's criticism of 
the communist government - filed a complaint, Elizardo Sanchez, head of 
the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation, said, 
citing information from friends of the detained journalist.
In a telephone interview, Sanchez said that he did not know the exact 
charges against her or the nature of the alleged mistreatment.
Sanchez said he suspects - but cannot prove - Garcia was targeted since 
she is a supporter of the Damas de Blanco, or Ladies in White, whose 
regular Sunday march has been blocked by Cuban government supporters for 
the past three weeks in a row. He said he would need several days to 
obtain the necessary documents clarifying her arrest.
Garcia, who filed Internet dispatches in defiance of government controls 
on all Cuban media, is being held at a high-security women's prison in 
Havana and is unreachable, Sanchez said.
There was no answer Thursday at the home of Laura Pollan, a founding 
member of the Ladies in White. Cuba's government had no immediate comment.
Sanchez said Garcia is a supporter but not a member of the group, 
comprising wives and mothers of 75 community organizers, independent 
journalists and political opposition activists who were arrested and 
sentenced to lengthy prison terms in March 2003. Fifty-three remain 
behind bars.
The government claims that those imprisoned have conspired with 
Washington to topple the island's communist system, charges that both 
they and U.S. officials deny.
Nearly every Sunday for seven years, the Damas have dressed in white and 
marched down a sidewalk along swank Fifth Avenue in Havana, usually 
without incident. But in March, the group held a week of demonstrations 
in other parts of the city, which provoked protests by government 
supporters and drew the attention of international news media.
Footage of the protesters being roughly bundled onto a bus at one of the 
events led to sympathy demonstrations in Miami and Los Angeles.
On April 11, the women were blocked from staging their traditional Fifth 
Avenue demonstration as well: State security agents told them they were 
not allowed to protest because they never obtained permission to do so, 
while a mob shouting pro-government slogans helped stop them.
During the past two Sundays, the women refrained from marching but stood 
near their usual route, withstanding hours of shouted insults and 
obscenities from counter-demonstrators who had been carefully organized 
and dispatched in shifts by the government.
Their weekly march had been one of the few regular expressions of 
dissent the government tolerated. Cuban leaders do not recognize 
Sanchez's human rights commission, but largely allow it to operate.
The commission says Cuba holds about 200 political prisoners, not 
counting Garcia.
The government says it holds none and protects human rights better than 
most countries by providing its citizens with free health care and 
education as well as subsidized housing, utilities, transportation and 
basic food.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/29/1604599/activist-cuban-backer-of-ladies.html
 
 
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