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Cuba
Under the usual conditions of news censorship, a swell of propaganda and harassment
of independent reporters, journalism has experienced a momentous event: the
publication of two issues of a bimonthly magazine published by the Márquez
Sterling Journalists Society.
The publication, entitled De Cuba, was first published last December in a makeshift
way, and later a second issue came out. Both editions, with a total of about
400 copies, are being distributed by the independent library project, which
has been extended to all the provinces.
Despite the modesty of the effort, the importance of De Cuba is that it is intended
for the Cuban reader who lives on the island, with the intention of opening
a window of press freedom in the censored internal environment.
The distribution of De Cuba has occurred at a time of a surge of alternative
magazines and bulletins, assisted by access to computers and photocopy machines
and the help of organizations and individuals abroad.
In the past year, the bulletins Trabajador Cubano, published by independent
trade unionists, and Nueva Izquierda, of the dissident Corriente Socialista
Democrática Cubana, have come out at irregular intervals in Havana. At
the same time, the first two issues of the magazine Perfil Social have been
published with the sponsorship of the Jesús Yáñez Pelletier
Foundation.
Another important source of alternative publications has developed in Camagüey
province. The agency El Mayor and the Journalists’ Colegio have just launched
the magazine Luz de Cuba for a domestic audience. El Mayor has been publishing
a bulletin of news and commentary for the past year, and it broadcasts a weekly
television newscast, with very sparse resources, that deals with local events
ignored by official propaganda.
Meanwhile, the magazine Fueros has begun publication in Santiago de Cuba with
political and cultural topics.
This climate of creativity, professional vigor and alternative thought comes
at the same times as a growing interest in training independent journalists.
Some groups have organized technical courses, and other journalists are studying
under a special program of Florida International University.
On March 14, which is celebrated with great official fanfare as the Cuban Press
Day, the Cuban Journalists Federation invited 60 independent journalists from
all over the country to a workshop on journalistic ethics. The federation and
the Márquez Sterling Society represent almost all the independent journalists
on the island.
However, this space of relative tolerance contrasts with the totalitarian rigidity
and repression against other displays of free expression.
The most notable cases of arrests and attacks are:
-Bernardo Arévalo Padrón is still in Aziza jail in Cienfuegos
province under deplorable conditions of forced labor. Arevalo, founder of the
independent agency Línea Sur, has been serving a six-year term since
November 28, 1997, on charges of contempt of President Fidel Castro and Vice
President Carlos Lage.
-Three other independent journalists have been detained since the beginning
of last year awaiting trial. They are: Carlos Alberto Domínguez (Agencia
Cuba Verdad) in Valle Grande prison in Havana; Carlos Brizuela Yera (Independent
Journalists’ Colegio of Camagüey) in prison in Holguín; and
Léster Téllez (Agencia de Prensa Libre Avileña) in Canaleta
prison, Ciego de Avila. Brizuela Yera was violently beaten by a jail guard on
January 31. Téllez received medical treatment at a hospital in Havana;
he lost his vision in one eye and has serious problems in the other.
-The police have harshly repressed independent journalists who try to cover
activities of the internal opposition and prisoners of conscience. Reporters
María del Carmen Carro and Carlos Ríos Otero, who sent reports
about prisoner Leonardo Bruzón Avila abroad, were threatened physically
and verbally. On February 28, Carro was stopped in Havana by State Security
agents, who tried to terrorize her. On March 4, in a drug store in a Havana
neighborhood a State Security agent kicked Ríos in front of the people
in the store.
-Journalist Maria Elena Alpízar, 60, a correspondent of Grupo Decoro
in Placetas, Villaclara, was attacked by a policeman while she covered an opposition
protest at the Nieves Morejón jail in Sancti Spíritus province.
-Other independent journalists were victims of police methods used to block
their access to information sources. The following journalists experienced temporary
detentions, warnings, stops, threats and fines: Milagros Beatón José
Ramón Castillo, Carlos Cerpa Maceira, Dorka Céspedes, Luis Cino
Alvarez, Ana Leonor Díaz Chamizo, Juan Carlos Garcell, José Luis
García Paneque, Marvin Hernández Monzón, Marilin Lahera,
Isabel Rey, Juan Téllez Rodríguez and Adelina Soto.
-On October 8, officials searched and seized all the work material of the French
journalist Catherine David of the weekly Le Nouvel Observateur, at the Havana
airport. David had entered the country on a tourist visa and took advantage
of the visit to interview members of the dissident movement. Her audio cassettes
were confiscated and the files on her laptop computer were copied.
-On February 11, State Security detained Argentine journalist and academic Fernando
Ruiz Parra, a professor at the University of Buenos Aires, near Matanzas. Ruiz
Parra was doing research about the growth of independent journalism. The granting
of visas to professionals is still used as a way to control information and
the country’s international image.
While some members of the independent press have recently been granted permission
to emigrate, there are other cases of delays and denials of requests to travel
abroad. The most delayed case is that of journalist and poet Raúl Rivero,
who has not been allow to leave temporarily to accept professional and academic
invitations for 15 years, although he has been offered the opportunity to leave
permanently.
Government control of information affects not only independent journalists,
but also other professionals and clergy. It stops any effort to allow the people
free access to different sources of ideas.
At the beginning of the year, the government prevented the U.S. Interests Section
in Havana from importing and distributing a shipment of books of literature,
history and general knowledge that were to be given away. The State Department
criticized the ban on March 6, saying that Washington has not put restrictions
on similar material that Cuban diplomats in Washington and at the United Nations
in New York, distribute on a regular basis without interference from U.S. authorities.
In January, on the fifth anniversary of the visit of Pope John Paul II, the
Catholic Church noted that the government still blocks access to the media and
limits the spread of its religious message. A recent pastoral letter of Cardinal
Jaime Ortega Alamino, archbishop of Havana, indicated that “political
power should not block or impede the proclamation of Christ’s message,
which the Church must spread using all communications media.”
The totalitarian obsession with information has reached absurd levels. On February
25, police officers seized all the copies of an issue of L’amateur du
cigare that was to be distributed during the Festival del Habano in the capital.
The police action was requested by the Cuban company Habanos S.A. because the
magazine had a drawing of the guerrilla Ernesto “Che” Guevara with
Mickey Mouse ears.
A new wave of repression is disguised in the official media as a campaign to
end the scourge of drugs, corruption and other illegal activities. This police
campaign, with operations in neighborhoods and towns across the country, includes
the dismantling of clandestine video rental stores and the seizure of homemade
antennas to received unauthorized television signals, which were alternative
sources of information and entertainment for a large part of the population.
The newspaper Granma, the organ of the Communist Party, has defended these actions
in response to demonstrations of repudiation by citizens who have disobeyed
and even physically confronted the police to protest these excesses.
The demagogy of the government’s language is supported by the pro-government
Cuban Journalists Union (UPEC). In January it sent a delegation to the World
Social Forum in Brazil to criticize “the unequal distribution of information”
and “the monopoly of the large multinational companies that control the
flow of information and communications technology.”
Last December, UPEC sponsored the IV Festival of the Written Press where about
700 official journalists discussed how to achieve “more professional journalistic
coverage” in the so-called battle of ideas declared by Castro. This idea
has been added to the daily flood of propaganda at the Round Table and the speeches
of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez on national radio and television.
The celebration of Cuban Press Day on March 14 was the occasion to heap praise
on “militant journalism committed to the revolution” of Castro and
to call for continuing the international campaign, by all the media, for the
freedom of the proclaimed Five Heroic Prisoners of the Empire, the five Cubans
convicted of espionage in the United States.
On February 5 the government named Francisco González, a former official
at the U.N. mission, as director of the official news agency Prensa Latina.
González was one of four diplomats expelled from the United States in
November for espionage activities.
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