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Saturday, August 27, 2011

On Cuba's Capitol Steps

On Cuba's Capitol Steps
Four women speak the unspeakable

The four Cuban women who took to the steps of the Capitol in Havana last
week chanting "liberty" for 40 minutes weren't exactly rebel forces. But
you wouldn't know that by the way the Castro regime reacted. A video of
the event shows uniformed state security forcibly dragging the women to
waiting patrol cars. They must have represented a threat to the regime
because they were interrogated and detained until the following day.

The regime's bigger problem may be the crowd that gathered to watch. In
a rare moment of dissent in that public square, the crowd booed, hissed
and insulted the agents who were sent to remove the women.

One of the four women, Sara Marta Fonseca, gave a telephone interview to
the online newspaper Diario de Cuba, based in Spain, as she made her way
home after being freed. Ms. Fonseca, who is a member of the Rosa Parks
Feminist Movement for Civil Rights, said that the group was demanding
"that the government cease the repression against the Ladies in White,
against the opposition and against the Cuban people in general." The
Ladies in White are dissidents who demand the release of all political
prisoners.

Yet as Ms. Fonseca explained, the group wasn't really addressing the
government. "Our objective is that one day the people will join us," she
said. "Realistically we do not have the strength and the power to defeat
the dictatorship. The strength and the power are to be found in the
unity of the people. In this we put all our faith, in that this people
will cross the barrier of fear and join the opposition to reclaim freedom."

Ms. Fonseca said her group chose the Capitol because the area is crowded
with locals and tourists and they wanted to "draw attention to the
people of Cuba." In the end, she said that they were satisfied with the
results because she heard the crowd crying "abuser, leave them alone,
they are peaceful and they are telling the truth." This reaction, the
seasoned dissident said, "was greater" than in the past.

"I am very happy because in spite of being beaten and dragged we could
see that the people were ready to join us."

For 52 years the Cuban dictatorship has held power through fear. The
poverty, isolation, broken families and lost dreams of two generations
of Cubans have persisted because the regime made dissent far too
dangerous. If that fear dissipates, the regime would collapse. Which is
why four women on the Capitol steps had to be gagged.

http://www.capitolhillcubans.com/
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111904875404576532563030650924.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

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