Raúl Castro urged to free 8 dissidents
BY JUAN O. TAMAYO
jtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com
The U.S. State Department and Amnesty International have urged Cuba to 
immediately release eight dissidents detained during peaceful protests 
and threatened with prosecutions.
A State Department spokesperson also said that the Raúl Castro 
government should release all political prisoners and not just the 52 
that it has promised to free by October.
The lengthy detentions of the eight -- arrested in two groups of five 
and three -- have sparked concern that Castro is getting tougher with 
critics. In recent years, the government has detained dissidents for 
brief periods, to intimidate them and block their activities, rather 
than bring them to trial.
Amnesty International urged Cuba to free the group of five jailed since 
Aug. 12 ``immediately and unconditionally, unless they are to be charged 
with an internationally recognized criminal offence and tried according 
to international standards for fair trial.''
Authorities also should ``cease the harassment, intimidation and 
persecution of citizens who seek to peacefully exercise their right to 
freedom of expression, assembly and association,'' the London-based 
group said late Wednesday.
The five members of the Youths for Democracy movement -- Enyor Díaz 
Allen, Francisco Manzanet Ortiz, Roberto González Pelegrín and brothers 
Néstor and Rolando Rodríguez Lobaina -- were seized in eastern Baracoa 
after a peaceful protest against the arrests of two other members.
They have not had access to a lawyer and have been told they will be 
charged with ``public disorder,'' according to Amnesty International.
State Department spokesperson Virginia Staab meanwhile urged Cuba to 
free the other three dissidents jailed since they read an 
anti-government statement Aug. 16 at the University of Havana.
``If Cuban government officials are serious in their public statements 
that there will be no more political prisoners in Cuba, we expect these 
activists to be release immediately,'' she said.
The three -- Michel Irois Rodríguez, Luis Enrique Labrador Díaz and 
Eduardo Pérez Flores -- are also refusing food to demand their freedom, 
said the Directorate.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/08/27/1794348/raul-castro-urged-to-free-8-dissidents.html
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