Luis Felipe Rojas, Translator: Raul G.
The sun was burning like never before over Eastern Cuba. It was 
September 10th when we immersed ourselves in the hills of Baracoa, we 
had to hide for two days so they wouldn't notice us. The National 
'Boitel and Zapata Live' March for Cuba's Freedom on the 13th of this 
month consisted of the presence of 36 human rights activists from the 
Eastern Democratic Alliance. The Orlando Zapata Tamayo National 
Resistance Front invited me to cover the event.
The Eastern retinue kicked off the March from Duaba Beach, where Maceo 
and Flor Crombet (Cuban independence fighters) disembarked in 1895. The 
opening remarks made by Rolando Rodriguez Lobaina highlighted the 
purpose of this civic action. We were not to respond to the offenses of 
either civilians or soldiers, nor to the same physical blows usually 
employed against us, we would not resist arrests and we would not shout 
slogans or display written ones, and those of us who could were to dress 
in white. We would be as peaceful as possible, as we ended up doing. 
When we were just about 20 meters from the police cordon we began to 
sing the national anthem and turned ourselves in to our captors. That 
was it, a total of 36 detainees between the 13 of us who participated 
and those who were jailed before arriving at our meeting spot.
The Arrest
Eliecer Palma, Jose Triguero Mulet, and I were taken on a Jeep to the 
Operation Unit towards Moa. We spent nine hours in that unit, sitting on 
a concrete bench waiting for the supposed decision of the Holguin G2 
about our destiny, just for them to later decide to send us to the 
filthy cells of that center of horror.
As we waited to be locked away there, activists Annie Carrion Romero, 
Milagros Leyva Ramirez, and Lewis Fajardo showed up to check on us and 
they were quickly detained. After keeping them for a few hours, the 
women were sent off to Mayari and the man dropped off in Cueto.
The food was more of the same: an acid and foul smelling ground beef, a 
transparent water with some noodles floating in it, rice with rocks and 
other pieces of trash, and a piece of a viand.
Among the detainees that I was sharing a cell with, there were two young 
men accused of killing and selling a cow. Those in another cell nearby 
mine had been caught in the illegal game of 'lottery', known as 'La 
Bolita', and I saw others who had been stripped of their conditional 
freedom for not working- they owed fines they could not afford or had 
bought some item of suspicious origin.
The chief of that Unit, Major Claudio Zaldivar Matos, a thug who is well 
known in Moa for his aggressiveness towards detainees and even his 
proper men, put on a show of 'toughness' so that I would get off the 
bunk bed and get in the line of prisoners who were to be inspected on 
that morning. The intervention of another police official kept him from 
beating me as he had promised, though we were able to exchange a few 
words: he stated that he did not care that I was a peaceful dissident 
and I assured him that they were all violators and that I did not follow 
orders, much less from soldiers.
I found out that he (Zaldivar) had paralyzed a man after a supposed 
accident in the municipality of Sagua de Tanamo. At 2 pm sharp, they 
released us without charges, contradicting the farce of the previous day 
when they tried to sign a document which stated we were carrying out 
acts of Public Disorder. They did not confiscate anything from us, and 
at that time others who had joined us in the march were already in the 
warmth of their homes savoring a cup of coffee. We left behind the 
squalor of that place, though I can still feel the pestilence of that 
dungeon on my skin, which is nothing more than an instrument frequently 
used by the regime in an attempt to impede what is inevitable, although 
many may doubt it because of distance, blindness, or a paralyzing fear.
Translated by Raul G.
September 30, 2011
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