By Erik Maza, Thursday, May. 13 2010 @ 3:56PM
Cuba has been on a repressive kick since the beginning of a year. After 
well-known critic Zapata Tamayo died in February, other Cubans took to 
the streets in protest.
Another one, Guillermo Farinas, is said to be at death's door. The 
government, in turn, responded by beating some them -- the Ladies in 
White -- and branding others "mercenaries" of the United States.
The increased crackdown prompted a leading international NGO to go South 
earlier this year to determine just how intense it was. Surprise, 
surprise. In a new report, published in the New York Review of Books 
Sunday, Human Rights Watch says the government is more repressive now 
than it has been in years.
"More than one hundred political prisoners locked up under Fidel 
remained behind bars, and Raúl's government had used sham trials to lock 
away scores more," the report says. "These new prisoners included more 
than forty dissidents whom Raúl had imprisoned for "dangerousness." 
Human Rights' report unspools like a Harry Bosch mystery. Journalists 
Daniel Wilkinson and Nik Steinberg, who actually traveled to Cuba, 
called it the "most difficult research mission" the NGO has undertaken 
in years. They traveled the entire island by car and never stayed in a 
town more than one night.
"The fear we had sensed over the phone was even more palpable on the 
ground," the report says. But six political dissidents, including 
several of the writers on our Top Ten Cuban bloggers list, talked to 
them. One of them, Eduardo Pacheco Ortiz, a former political prisoner, 
says that despite increased visibility because of the recent protests, 
most Cubans are still afraid of even talking to dissidents. "These 
people--for fear of losing their jobs, for fear that [the authorities] 
will take it out on someone in their family--simply stop talking to me."
It's easy to see why. As the report points out, the Cuban government 
often jails critics for things as innocent as receiving fax machines -- 
"used systematically in sending information to counterrevolutionary 
cells located in Miami" - or medicines -"with the explicit purpose of 
winning over addicts to their cause."
But it was this part that caught our attention: some dissidents were 
jailed simply for having access to "websites of enemy 
publications...[and] counterrevolutionary dailies like the Nuevo Herald, 
the Miami Herald, Agence France-Press, Reuters, and the American 
television channel CNN." What gives Cuba, our muckraking stories on 
Kardashian poop don't get us the counterrevolutionary label? We promise 
to try harder, lest we be branded CIA spooks.
http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/riptide/2010/05/human_rights_watch_cuba_more_r.php
 
 
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