Wives and mothers of political prisoners' in Cuba have again been 
prevented from marching in Havana.
Six women - known as the Ladies in White - were surrounded by an angry 
mob of pro-government supporters and then pushed off the street into a park.
The women stood silently for several hours as the crowd shouted insults 
and pro-revolutionary slogans.
The women, who are demanding freedom for their husbands and sons, were 
similarly treated last week.
On Sunday Cubans voted in municipal elections, described by the 
authorities as proof of democracy on the communist island.
Officials said some 93% of the voters had cast their ballots shortly 
before the voting ended.
The Communist party is the only legal political organisation in Cuba.
Stand-off in park
The confrontation in Havana started at afternoon, when the Ladies in 
White tried to hold their weekly gathering after Sunday's mass.
Cuban pro-government citizens surround and shout slogans to the Ladies 
in White in Havana
On leaving the church they were surrounded by an angry mob and shoved 
off the street and into a park.
They were surrounded for about seven hours, with pro-government 
supporters shouting insults.
The women responded by staying on their feet, silently staring their 
opponents in the face.
They have been staging weekly marches in Havana for several years, but 
government loyalists began breaking up the protests earlier this month 
with the help of security officials.
Cuban officials say the women do not have a permit to march in the capital.
Until recently very few people in Cuba were aware of the Ladies in 
White, and there is still very little sympathy for their cause, the 
BBC's Michael Voss in Havana reports.
But this sort of intimidation and violence is doing serious damage to 
Cuba's reputation abroad, our correspondent adds.
The marches have been closely monitored by western diplomats, and the 
women have received verbal support from the United States and European 
Union.
Cuban President Raul Castro has accused the West of launching a campaign 
to discredit Cuba by provoking such incidents, our correspondent adds.
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