2 May 2012
Cuba: "The authorities attack us because we talk about the issues people
face"
"I do not think a tweet from me is going to save anybody from prison but
it does save them from impunity"
Journalist and blogger Luis Felipe Rojas
For Cuban journalist and blogger Luis Felipe Rojas, posting an entry on
his blog Crossing the Wire Fences or even sending an email is a daunting
task.
Every time he wants to access the internet, he has to leave his house in
the early hours of the morning and travel 200 kilometres from his
hometown of Holguín, in eastern Cuba, to the closest cybercafé. If he is
lucky, and he is not stopped at a police checkpoint on the way, he will
get to a computer in about three hours.
Once there, Luis Felipe has to show ID to buy an access card and pay six
US dollars to use the internet for sixty minutes – that is almost a
third of a monthly local salary.
Some days he finds websites containing information considered critical
of the government are blocked or messages have disappeared from his inbox.
Internet access is so highly controlled in Cuba that critics of the
government have come up with creative ways to ensure their stories get out.
Sometimes that involves converting articles into digital images and
sending them via SMS to a contact outside of Cuba, to type and post on
Luis Felipe's blog. He also uses text messages for posting on Twitter
but the lack of internet access means that he cannot see what others say
to (or about) him.
Luis Felipe is part of a growing group of journalists and government
critics who are finding new ways to by-pass state control in order to
disseminate information about human rights abuses taking place in Cuba.
According to a recent report by Amnesty International, independent
journalists and bloggers have faced increased threats and intimidation
when publishing information critical to the authorities.
The 'Hablemos Press' Information Centre, an unofficial news agency
monitoring human rights abuses across Cuba, recently reported that from
March 2011 to March 2012 inclusively, more than 75 independent
journalists have been detained, some, like Caridad Caballero Batista up
to 20 times.
"After the mass release of prisoners of conscience in 2011, we have seen
authorities sharpening their strategy to silence dissent by harassing
government critics and independent journalists with short term
detentions and public acts of repudiation," said Gerardo Ducos, Cuba
expert with Amnesty International.
On 25 March, Luis Felipe was detained in a local police station for five
days in order to prevent him from travelling to attend an open-air mass
celebrated by Pope Benedict XVI.
"The authorities attack us because we talk about the issues people face
- that not everybody has enough food, that public services do not always
work, that there are problems with the health service," Luis Felipe said
to Amesty International.
"I have been scared many times. Scared of going to the street, of being
beaten up, of being locked up for a long time and not seeing my
children. But fear does not stop me. I do not think a tweet from me is
going to save anybody from prison but it does save them from impunity."
http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/cuba-authorities-attack-us-because-we-talk-about-issues-people-face-2012-05-02
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