Cuban police briefly arrested more than 100 dissidents over the weekend
One human rights activist described 'a state of paranoia' as at least 
100 dissidents were arrested ahead of key anniversaries.
By Juan O. Tamayo
jtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com
Police briefly arrested more than 100 Cuban dissidents over the weekend 
in a multi-pronged campaign to prevent public demonstrations marking the 
anniversaries of the deaths of five Castro opponents, activists reported 
Monday.
Former political prisoner Angel Moya and nine other government opponents 
also were detained and there was no word on their whereabouts as of late 
Monday, said his wife, Bertha Soler, leader of the dissident group 
Ladies in White.
"There's a kind of state of paranoia" in which security agents are 
sweeping up anyone they consider a threat, said Havana human rights 
activist Elizardo Sánchez Santa Cruz, who put the number of confirmed 
weekend arrests at more than 100.
Most were freed hours or days later, not in time to join protests 
marking the Feb. 23, 2010 death of political prisoner Orlando Zapata 
Tamayo after a lengthy hunger strike, or the deaths of four South 
Florida men whose Brothers to the Rescue airplanes were shot down by 
Cuban fighter jets on Feb. 24, 1996.
One crackdown that elicited surprise was that against the group Ladies 
in White in Havana, which has been largely left alone during the past 
two years, when they attended Sunday mass at the Santa Rita church and 
then marched around the neighborhood.
But police and pro-government mobs have not allowed the women to protest 
any other way, and swiftly arrested 20 of them when they appeared to be 
taking their march outside their usual boundaries, Soler told El Nuevo 
Herald.
"We walked to our usual bus stop and about 15 got on a bus that filled 
up, so the rest of us started walking to another bus stop, and all of a 
sudden we were surrounded by police cars, motorcycles, buses, 
everything," she said.
She said that she and 19 other Ladies in White members then were shoved 
into an empty bus and driven away. They were held on the bus for more 
than four hours, Soler said.
Dissidents said that police in other parts of the island have tried to 
avert protests by beating activists and surrounding their homes.
Police on Saturday detained three well known government critics — 
musician Gorki Aguila, graffiti artist Danilo "El Sexto" Maldonado and 
singer Ismael de Diego — before a planned concert at a park. They were 
freed Sunday.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/02/28/2664463/cuban-police-briefly-arrested.html
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