31 Oct 2011 03:09
Source: Content partner // Womens eNews
The Ladies in White, a group of family members of imprisoned dissidents, 
march during their weekly protest in Havana February 27, 2011. 
REUTERS/Enrique De La Osa
Relatives of political prisoners in Cuba--many of them women--are 
fighting to curb abuses they say family members suffer during 
incarceration. One of the most prominent opposition groups, Ladies in 
White, meets on Sundays.
(WOMENSENEWS)-- Four women stood with anti-government signs in a 
well-trafficked square in Havana.
They were members of Ladies in White, a group that formed in 2003 after 
75 political dissidents were jailed.
Dressed in white--the color of peace--they march to Catholic mass to 
pray for human rights and the release of relatives and loved ones in prison.
The group has been meeting on Sundays across Cuba for years. But this 
particular small demonstration a couple of months ago--on Aug. 23 in 
Havana--proved momentous. When a plain-clothes police officer came to 
break up the women, some nearby people defended the women and forced the 
officer to leave in search of backup.
It wasn't the first time bystanders had aided the women, but because it 
was in such a busy area, it was the first time such an action was caught 
on video with cell-phone cameras and uploaded to YouTube the very next day.
"It was visible proof, released to an international audience over 
YouTube, that there is an increasing support for the resistance 
movement," said Aramis Perez, a leader of the Assembly of Cuban 
Resistance, based in Miami, Fla.
Often, he said, reports filed from Havana are censored or written by 
government supporters and describe activist groups as "small and 
fragmented."
Two days later Amnesty International, the London-based rights group, 
published a call to stop the repression of the Ladies in White.
Police and government officials have violently attacked individuals and 
groups of female political dissidents on at least 25 occasions this 
year--sometimes while the women were engaged in nonviolent protest, and 
other times while they were with their families at home--according to a 
report released by the Assembly of Cuban Resistance in August. The 
report, "Cuba: Violent Aggressions Against Women, Human Rights 
Defenders," was based on daily communication with activist groups in Cuba.
'A Leading Role'
The resistance movement is carried out by a wide cross-section of Cuban 
citizens--urban, rural, farmers, students--but "women have been playing 
a leading role," said Perez.
One of those women is Laura Pollan, the leader of Women and White and 
the recipient of the European Parliament's 2005 Sakharov Prize for 
Freedom of Thought. Pollan died on Oct.14 at age 63.
Another is Bertha Antunez who lives in exile in Florida.
She spoke at a meeting last month on the sidelines of the U.N. General 
Assembly along with other human rights activists, including Marina 
Nemat, Iranian author and former political prisoner; Jacqueline Kasha, 
Ugandan LGBT rights activist and winner of Martin Ennals 2011 Human 
Rights Defenders Prize; and Rebiya Kadeer, Uyghur dissident and former 
political prisoner.
Antunez used the podium to urge the international community to help 
women in Cuba who are working for human rights.
"These women, today, at this moment, risk their lives, put their bodies 
before the police violence," she told a roomful of people at the forum, 
organized by a coalition of international nongovernmental groups. "Their 
voices shout for freedom while they are brutally beaten and they 
continue to take to the streets."
Antunez said her activism was fueled by prison visits to her brother, 
released in 2007, after 17 years of incarceration in various prisons, 
making him one of the longest serving political prisoners in Cuba.
"Soldiers from the prison savagely beat my brother in my presence and in 
the presence of two children from our family. We were beaten too. On 
various occasions I had to resort to a hunger strike to save my 
brother's life," she told the human rights activists, advocates and 
supporters.
Motivational Visits
In an interview with Women's eNews, Antunez expanded on how those prison 
visits had motivated her.
"I got firsthand testimony from many prisoners and there were things I 
couldn't believe" she said. "I never thought these abuses were taking 
place in my country. I knew there were injustices outside the prison 
because we are all victims of those; but this was torture."
A Cuban dissident group, the Cuban Democratic Directorate, based in 
Hialeah, Fla., reports that Antunez's brother, Jorge Luis Garcia Perez, 
was arrested during a demonstration for yelling that communism was "an 
error and a utopia." His speech was considered "oral enemy propaganda," 
the report says. His sentence was extended several times for speaking 
back to guards and continuing to vocalize his political beliefs.
Antunez and relatives of other family members of political prisoners 
founded the National Movement of Civic Resistance "Pedro Luis Boitel" to 
fight abuse in prisons.
The group remains active and continues to organize peaceful protests, 
sit-ins and hunger strikes at prisons across the island.
This year, the incarceration of two of the group's members and other 
recent crackdowns on dissidents spurred Human Rights Watch to issue 
statement in June saying that Cuban laws "criminalize virtually all 
forms of dissent, and grant officials extraordinary authority to 
penalize people who try to exercise their basic rights."
http://www.trust.org/trustlaw/news/for-cuban-women-sundays-are-for-protest-marches
 
 
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