Posted on Thursday, 08.08.13
Cuban dissident Antúnez says women, blacks, provincial residents joining
movement
BY JUAN O. TAMAYO
JTAMAYO@ELNUEVOHERALD.COM
Cuba's dissident movement has been growing with the increased
involvement of women, blacks and provincial residents, the opposition
activist known as Antúnez said Wednesday during his first public
appearance in Miami.
Jorge Luís García Pérez also said that although President Barack Obama's
decision to lift almost all restrictions on Cuban-American travel and
remittances to the island was well-intentioned, his administration also
"broke a tradition of solidarity" with dissidents.
Cubans separated by decades of animosity have been able to see each
other again, but "that's not helped at all" to improve political
conditions on the island, García said in a lengthy interview with El
Nuevo Herald and The Miami Herald.
The 48-year-old García, regarded as one of Cuba's more combative
dissidents and best known as Antúnez, spent 17 years in prison after
shouting anti-government slogans during a speech by then-Defense
Minister Raúl Castro in 1990.
He landed in Miami on Sunday on his first-ever trip abroad even though
he has had a U.S. visitors visa for the past six or seven years. The
Cuban government previously told him that he could leave the island only
if he agreed to stay out, he said.
García was the latest of the many dissidents allowed to travel abroad
after Havana eased its migration restrictions in January. They include
Guillermo Fariñas and Antonio Rodiles, blogger Yoani Sánchez and Ladies
in White leader Berta Soler.
While Cuba's dissident groups were traditionally led by older
intellectuals, García said, they have been growing in recent years with
the addition of blacks like himself, women like the Ladies in White and
people who live outside of Havana.
The most aggressive resistance is currently in the provinces, he added,
because people there know and trust each other while residents of Havana
barely know their next-door neighbors. García lives in Placetas, a
municipality of 50,000 people in central Cuba.
Proof of the growing resistance is in the number of anti-government
signs that appear at sunrise, he told the newspapers, the rising rate of
abstentions in elections and the complaints increasingly voiced by
usually ultra-loyal military officers.
Castro, who succeeded ailing brother Fidel in 2006, has replied with
increased harassments, threats and detentions after which activists are
usually released in isolated rural roads, García said.
Like most Cuban dissidents, García also dismissed the economic reforms
pushed by Castro for the past five years as an attempt to make only the
minimum changes required to ensure the survival of the island's
communist political and economic system.
Although the reforms have brought about "some slight improvements in
some sectors of the population," García added, overall "the people see
no improvement at all. The people see fraud."
"The people want bread, but also freedom," he said, adding that the
opposition movement "will not settle for little changes."
García also declared that the hierarchy of Cuba's Catholic Church has
been insensitive to the work of the dissident groups and that Cardinal
Jaime Ortega, the archbishop of Havana, "does not enjoy credibility"
among Cubans.
As for the foreign journalists based in Havana, he said that dissidents
regularly send them news releases, photos and videos but they seldom
publish the information. Cuba has expelled several foreign journalists
whose coverage they deemed too negative.
Reporters in Havana are either "insensitive to the pain" of the
opposition "or in clear complicity" with the government, he added.
García, who helped found the National Movement for Civic Resistance
Pedro Luis Boitel, and his wife, Yris Tamara Pérez Aguilera, an activist
in the Rosa Parks Movement for Civil Rights, plan to stay outside Cuba
for about two months.
They are scheduled to meet Friday in Miami with Reps. Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen and Mario Diaz-Balart and former Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart,
all Miami Republicans. It is not yet known if they will travel to
Washington or other countries to speak about Cuba.
García said he had the impression that people outside the island
sometimes view the allegations of human rights and other abuses reported
by dissidents as likely exaggerations, although dissidents most often
don't report all they suffer.
Government agents once attacked his wife and other women dissidents with
machetes, he said. And he added that a prison guard once threw a rope
into his cell and said, "Look, black guy. So you can hang yourself."
Source: "Cuban dissident Antúnez says women, blacks, provincial
residents joining movement - Cuba - MiamiHerald.com" -
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/08/08/3549600/cuban-dissident-antunez-says-women.html
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