Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Jailed Cuban dissident rushed to hospital after long hunger strike

Posted on Tuesday, 07.03.12

Jailed Cuban dissident rushed to hospital after long hunger strike

Frank Montero had been reported on a lengthy hunger strike to protest
his detention.
By Juan O. Tamayo
jtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com

Dissidents in the eastern province of Santiago de Cuba reported Monday
that jailed activist Frank Montero, who has been on a hunger strike for
more than 30 days, was rushed to a hospital over the weekend.

Authorities have refused to inform Montero's relatives about his health
or whereabouts after he was removed from the Aguadores prison on
Saturday, said Rolando González, like Montero a member of the opposition
Cuban Patriotic Union.

Montero went on a hunger strike 36 days ago to protest his arrest on
Feb. 19, along with his twin brother Daniel, on charges of trying to
leave Cuba without the required permits ailing, González said. The
brothers claimed they were going fishing.

Daniel Montero, who was also being held in Agujadores, told relatives
Sunday by telephone that his brother had been rushed to a hospital. The
brothers, who are 29 years old, are from the city of Santiago de Cuba.

Havana human rights activist Elizardo Sanchez said he first heard of
Montero's hunger strike about 19 days ago.

The deaths of political prisoners Orlando Zapata Tamayo and Wilman
Villar Mendoza amid lengthy hunger strikes — Zapata in 2010 and Villar
early this year — sparked broad condemnations of Cuba's human rights record.

A member of the Ladies in White dissident group, meanwhile, alleged that
police beat and humiliated her to block her from attending Sunday mass
at the El Cobre Basilica of Our Lady of Charity in Santiago province.

"My whole body is black and blue," a sobbing Yaqueline García said in a
declaration recorded for Hablalo Sin Miedo, or Say it Without Fear, a
Miami-based facility that receives and disseminates reports of human
rights abuses on the island.

García said police detained her Saturday on her way to the shrine,
dragged her in a police station until her pants almost came off and then
released her late Sunday on a remote farm road after throwing her
personal belongings at her feet .

Dissident José Daniel Ferrer García said police checkpoints established
Saturday on the main road in the Santiago region, the Central Highway,
detained or turned back about 20 Ladies in White as they tried to reach
the El Cobre shrine for Sunday mass.

Another 11 managed to slip into the basilica, on a narrow road off the
Central Highway, said Ferrer, who lives near El Cobre, 465 miles east of
Havana. Most of the women detained were freed late Sunday and early Monday.

The Ladies in White in Havana are generally allowed to attend Sunday
masses at the Santa Rita church in the capital and afterward stage brief
street marches — the lone dissident protest tolerated by the government.
But their eastern brethren have not been permitted to gather for the
Sunday masses at El Cobre.

About 30 gay rights and other activists carrying rainbow flags and
banners also walked down a Havana boulevard for Cuba's second annual Gay
Pride march Sunday, according to organizer Ignacio Estrada.

The marches went off without incident, although the activists were
trailed by a van loaded with police men from an elite riot-control unit
known as the Black Wasps.

Some black-rights activists, political dissidents and passersby also
joined the two-hour march down Paseo El Prado, including some visiting
Cuban-Americans and one apparent U.S. tourist, said Estrada.

Activists passed out pamphlets explaining gay rights under international
conventions and at one point Estrada and his wife, Wendy Iriarte, went
inside a cubicle made with bars, much like a prison cell, left on the
boulevard from a recent art show.

"We went behind the bars because we feel imprisoned for our way of
thinking," said Estrada, who married Iriarte, a transgender woman, last
year. Estrada calls himself a gay rights activist and political dissident.

Hablemos Press, an independent news agency, meanwhile, reported that it
had received word that dissident Angel Frometa Lovaina in the
far-eastern city of Guantánamo was sentenced to two years in prison last
week for resisting arrest and disobedience.

Frometa claimed the charge stemmed from his street protest Dec. 11
demanding political reforms, according to the report. Another dissident
in Guantánamo said local authorities have long been trying to seize a
small farm that Frometa owns.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/07/03/2879087/jailed-cuban-dissident-rushed.html

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