MIAMI, Florida (July 2, 2004)—Cuban poet and journalist Raúl Rivero
Castañeda is being subjected to harassment at the Canaleta Prison in Ciego
de Avila province where he is being held, his wife, Blanca Reyes, reported in
a telephone call to the Inter American Press Association (IAPA) yesterday.
Rivero, head of the independent news agency Cuba Press and regional vice chairman
for Cuba of the IAPA’s Committee on Freedom of the Press and Information,
is serving a 20-year prison sentence term for the crime of thinking and writing.
He was recently awarded the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) 2004 Press Freedom Prize.
In an open letter to the international community dictated by telephone to his
wife, Rivero gave details of what he described as a “second sentence”
– saying that in addition to “the severity of the Cuban prison system”
were the hostile actions of the jailers. Blanca Reyes quoted him as saying that
the conditions in the prison had deteriorated notably in the last month.
The chairman of the IAPA’s Committee on Freedom of the Press and Information,
Rafael Molina, protested what he called the unnecessary suffering that Rivero
was being subjected to. “The Cuban government should abide by international
treaties regarding the treatment of prisoners of conscience,” he declared.
“We therefore expect that it will put an end to such practices, provide
Rivero with the humanitarian treatment that he deserves and, finally, release
him along with the other imprisoned journalists, given that their sentences
are totally unjustified.”
There are currently 30 journalists behind bars in Cuban prisons – 27
of them as the result of a wave of repression unleashed in March 2003, and the
other three having been imprisoned before or after that date.