Observatorio de Derechos Humanos extiende su vigilancia a toda la ,población cubana
Exilio
Observatorio de Derechos Humanos extiende su vigilancia a toda lapoblación cubanaDDCMadrid 06-03-2011 – 11:10 am.
Observatorio Cubano de Derechos Humanos. Madrid, 4 de marzo de 2011.
El Observatorio Cubano de Derechos Humanos, integrado por miembros del Grupo de los 75 desterrados a España, Damas de Blanco y exiliados, anunció que extenderá sus denuncias sobre la situación en la Isla más allá de los hechos que afectan a la disidencia interna.
La situación de los derechos humanos en Cuba "no sólo se circunscribe a la oposición, sino a toda la población civil entre los cuales se destacan la falta de información, la falta de los derechos de los trabajadores, la falta de recursos de primera necesidad, la falta de libertad de movimiento, de expresión", dijo la organización es una nota que resumió una reunión realizada los días 3 y 4 de este mes en Madrid.
De acuerdo con el comunicado, el Observatorio realizará un informe mensual que difundirá a la opinión pública internacional, los medios de comunicación, instituciones públicas y privadas, gobiernos y organismos.
Como parte de esa estrategia, enviará reportes actualizados a los grupos políticos con representación en el Parlamento Europeo así como a otros gobiernos que no formen parte de la Unión Europea.
En la reunión participaron los miembros del Grupo de los 75 Alejandro González Raga (portavoz del Observatorio), Omar Rodríguez Saludes, Miguel Galbán Gutiérrez, José Luis García Paneque, Pablo Pacheco Ávila, Horacio Piña Borrego, Víctor Rolando Arroyo, Alfredo Pulido López, Raúl Rivero Castañeda y Marcelo Cano Rodríguez; las Damas de Blanco Elsa González Padrón, Berta Bueno Fuente e Yliana Marrero Joa, y los exiliados Yaxys Cires Dib, Ernesto Gutiérrez Tamargo y Elena Larrinaga de Luis.
http://www.diariodecuba.com/derechos-humanos/3461-observatorio-de-derechos-humanos-extiende-su-vigilancia-toda-la-poblacion-cuba
Wife asks Cuba to release husband
Wife asks Cuba to release husbandPublished: March. 4, 2011 at 12:49 PM
HAVANA, March 4 (UPI) — The wife of an American held on conspiracy charges has asked the Cuban government to free her husband on humanitarian grounds.
Alan Gross has been held in a Cuban jail since his arrest in 2009 and prosecutors are seeking a 20-year prison term, CNN reported.
Gross is charged with importing illegal satellite equipment to connect dissidents to the Internet. The United States said Gross, who was held for more than a year before being formally charged, was helping Cuba's Jewish community improve communications.
His wife, Judy, asked Cuba to release him on humanitarian grounds. His mother has been diagnosed with lung cancer and a daughter has breast cancer.
"Alan is an incredibly loving father. We've been married 40 years. His daughters miss him terribly," Judy Gross said.
The trial was scheduled to start Friday.
Cuban President Raul Castro said in 2009 Gross was illegally distributing "satellite communications equipment" to dissidents.
"The U.S. government has not renounced its goal of destroying the revolution," Castro said. "The enemy is as active as always. Proof of that is the detention, in the last few days, of an American citizen."
U.S. officials have widely criticized Cuba's detention of Gross.
"We deplore the Cuban government's announcement that Cuban prosecutors intend to seek a 20-year sentence for Mr. Gross," said Gloria Berbena, public affairs officer for the U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana.
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2011/03/04/Wife-asks-Cuba-to-release-husband/UPI-23531299260983/
Explosions shake munitions dump in Cuba
Explosions shake munitions dump in CubaSunday, 06 March 2011 12:58
HAVANA: A series of explosion have shaken a military munitions dump in Cuba without causing any casualties, the military announced Sunday.
The cause of the blasts, which occurred outside the town of Santiago de las Vegas, south of the capital, after 8:00 pm Saturday (0100 GMT Sunday), was not immediately known.
But a statement released by the Revolutionary Armed Forces According the the statement, the emergency situation was under control in less than three hours, and nobody was killed or injured.
http://www.brecorder.com/world/north-america/5823-explosions-shake-munitions-dump-in-cuba.html
Trial of US contractor ends in Cuba, no verdict
Posted on Saturday, 03.05.11
Trial of US contractor ends in Cuba, no verdictBy PAUL HAVENAssociated Press
HAVANA — The trial of a U.S. government contractor facing up to 20 years in jail on charges he sought to undermine Cuba's government wrapped up Saturday after both sides gave closing arguments, but with no indication of when a verdict might come.
A statement by the Cuban government Saturday night said that during the trial Gross accepted some responsibility but added that he had been "used" and blamed the company that sent him to the island.
The fate of Alan Gross, a 61-year-old Maryland native detained for more than a year since being caught bringing communications equipment into the communist-run island, was in the hands of a five-judge panel.
Gloria Berbena, a spokeswoman for the U.S. diplomatic mission on the island, reiterated after the government statement was released that no verdict had been announced. She said Gross' Cuban lawyer would be notified when a verdict was reached.
Gross' American lawyer, Peter J. Kahn, issued a short statement earlier, saying only that the trial had ended and that "the family remains hopeful that Alan will be home soon."
Cuban government officials confirmed to The Associated Press that no verdict had been reached despite some reports saying a ruling had been issued. The officials insisted on speaking anonymously because they were not authorized to discuss the case.
Gross was working for Development Alternatives Inc. as part of a USAID-backed "democracy building" program when he was arrested in December 2009. He has been held at Havana's maximum-security Villa Marista jail ever since – most of that time without charge.
His detention has worsened relations between Cuba and Washington, with U.S. officials making clear that no meaningful rapprochment is possible while Gross is in jail.
Cuba says USAID programs like the one Gross was working on are aimed at overthrowing the government of President Raul Castro. U.S. officials and Gross' family insist he was trying to provide Internet service to the island's Jewish community and has done nothing wrong.
According to the government statement read on state television's main news broadcast, Gross "accused DAI of having put him in danger and leading to his current situation, to ruin the life and well-being of his family."
The statement said the judges heard from 10 witnesses and nine experts and were presented with documentary and physical evidence during the two-day trial, which was closed to foreign journalists.
Should Gross be convicted, efforts would immediately turn to getting him released through a court order or executive pardon, possibly on humanitarian grounds. His wife and U.S. officials say Gross has lost more than 90 pounds while in jail, and note that his 26-year-old daughter and 88-year-old mother are both suffering from cancer.
A senior State Department official said as recently as January that she had received signals Cuba would free Gross shortly.
Several analysts say Cuba wanted to use the case to shine a light on the USAID programs, which have long been a source of irritation in Havana. With the trial over, they argue, Cuba has no strategic reason to keep Gross in jail much longer.
The trial began Friday with about nine hours of testimony in a mansion-turned-courtroom in a once-prosperous neighborhood of Havana.
A thin-looking Gross was seen getting out of an official car and entering the court early Saturday, guarded by Cuban security personnel. His wife, lawyers and U.S. consular officials arrived a short time later.
The Cuban Foreign Ministry released a statement Friday night saying Saturday's proceedings – which lasted eight hours – would include the presentation of further evidence and final statements from the prosecution and defense. Trials in Cuba generally only go on for a day or two, with verdicts rendered within days.
In describing Friday's session, the Foreign Ministry said Gross made a statement and answered questions of the prosecution, defense and court. It said other witnesses and experts also testified. There were no immediate details offered following Saturday's proceedings.
Kahn, Gross' American lawyer, said Friday his client had "presented a vigorous defense" during the first day of testimony.
He said Gross was suffering "extreme mental stress" and reiterated the family's call that he be released. In Washington on Friday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called on Cuba to release Gross unconditionally. Gross was also represented by a Cuban attorney, Nuris Pinero.
Washington spent $20 million a year on Cuba democracy programs in 2009 and 2010, with USAID controlling most of that and doling out the work to subcontractors.
Development Alternatives Inc., or DAI, was awarded a multimillion-dollar contract for the program in which Gross was involved, and Gross received more than a half million dollars through his company, despite the fact he spoke little Spanish and had no history of working in Cuba. Gross traveled to the island several times over a short period on a tourist visa, apparently raising Cuban suspicions.
The USAID programs have been criticized repeatedly in congressional reports as being wasteful and ineffective, and funding was held up briefly in 2010 over concerns following Gross' arrest. The money has begun flowing again, though U.S. officials say DAI is no longer part of the program.Associated Press writer Paul Haven contributed to this report.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/03/05/v-fullstory/2099917/trial-of-us-contractor-ends-in.html
Taller de atrezo y foto apañada
Publicado el domingo, 03.06.11CRONICA DE DOMINGO
Taller de atrezo y foto apañadaBy RAUL RIVERO
Madrid — La vida azarosa y compleja de la oposición pacífica cubana, los presos políticos, el periodismo independiente y los brotes de legítima sociedad civil en Cuba, están en el programa de trabajo diario de los aparatos que manejan el mecanismo obsoleto, pero obstinado de la propaganda gubernamental.
Ese sector creciente y múltiple de la sociedad criolla merece, además, la prioridad de las largas jornadas de las instituciones represivas. Allí están sus objetivos directos. Contra ellos se dicta una orden de arresto o se organiza una pandilla variopinta y escandalosa para que salga a la calle a sacarse del cuerpo un poco de temor y frustración en un confuso y peligroso concierto de insultos, golpes y pedradas.
Es la combinación de esas dos fuerzas del totalitarismo la que trata de hacer que los demócratas cubanos vivan en una realidad forzada a unos segundos planos permanentes.
Se les reprime, se les persigue y amanecen un día detrás de las rejas y bajo la opacidad de los candados chinos. Después, en los talleres estatales de reparaciones de escenarios se les somete a un proceso de anulación, sombra y disimulo para disminuirlos como ciudadanos y dejarlos en el fondo de un panorama que se quiere rellenar con la apertura de unos cuchitriles donde se venden boniatos y plátanos burros. O con un panfleto en defensa de Moamar el Kadafi, un payaso que le dispara en la cabeza a Libia embalsamado en sus hopalandas.
El caso es que no se hable y no vayan a los medios de prensa los nombres de los cinco prisioneros del grupo de los 75 de la Primavera Negra del 2003 que siguen en las celdas porque se niegan a abandonar Cuba. Que nadie sepa quiénes son Oscar Elías Biscet, Pedro Argüelles Morán, José Daniel Ferrer, Librado Linares y Félix Navarro.
Que se pierda la denuncia de que Néstor Rodríguez Lobaina, el líder opositor preso sin juicio desde diciembre de 2010, está muy grave en un hospital después 16 días de huelga hambre en la prisión Combinado de Guantánamo.
otas etéreas sobre el turismo, los habanos prohibidos para el hombre de a pie. Reportajes sobre el valor y el éxito de Hugo Chávez, Daniel Ortega, Rafael Correa y Evo Morales, para que no trascienda que el mes pasado, en Cuba, casi 400 ciudadanos fueron arrestados para tratar de impedir que se le rindiera homenaje al prisionero político Orlando Zapata Tamayo en el primer aniversario de su muerte.
Difamaciones y fuego de artificio, populismo momificado y mentiras cinceladas sobre la marcha en un largo camino, para que la gente haga como que se cree que son acciones de reafirmación y fidelidad al régimen los mítines de repudio a las Damas de Blanco. Cuando la verdad es que se reciben, fuera y dentro del país, como sesiones públicas de suplicios. Una muestra semanal de intolerancia y odio que se ofrece al mundo.
La ficción, la torva ficción de los propagandistas, nunca va a tener más fuerza que la realidad.
http://www.elnuevoherald.com/2011/03/06/898221/raul-rivero-taller-de-atrezo-y.html
Cuba: declaran culpable a Gross
Cuba: declaran culpable a GrossSentencia que recibirá el contratista de EU, pendienteDomingo 06 de marzo de 2011 El Universal
LA HABANA (Reuters).— Un tribunal cubano halló culpable a un contratista estadounidense de delitos contra la seguridad del Estado por implicarse en "un proyecto subversivo" contra la isla, dijo anoche la televisión estatal.
Alan Gross, preso desde hace 15 meses, se enfrenta a una condena de 20 años de cárcel, después que fuera acusado de facilitar acceso ilegal a internet a opositores como parte de un programa de Estados Unidos para promover cambios políticos en la isla de gobierno comunista. La sentencia será dada a conocer en "los próximos días", dijo la televisión.
"En la vista del juicio oral, la Fiscalía aportó elementos de prueba de la participación directa del acusado en la introducción y desarrollo en el país de un proyecto subversivo para intentar derrocar la revolución", dijo una nota oficial leída en la televisión estatal.
Según esto, Gross pretendía "crear redes clandestinas de infocomunicaciones" para fomentar "provocaciones contrarrevolucionarias" cuyo blanco serían "el sector juvenil, centros universitarios, culturales, religiosos, grupos femeninos y raciales".
Gross, de 61 años, reconoció haber sido "utilizado y engañado" por Developments Alternatives INC, la empresa que lo contrató para ejecutar en Cuba un programa de la Agencia para el Desarrollo Internacional de Estados Unidos (UDSAID), que destina 40 millones de dólares al año para promover cambios en la isla.
"(Gross) acusó a la DAI de haberlo puesto en peligro y conducirlo a su situación actual de arruinar la vida y la economía de su familia", dijo la nota oficial. En el juicio de dos días, que concluyó ayer, declararon 10 testigos, nueve peritos con 26 informes periciales.
El gobierno cubano no permitió el acceso de corresponsales extranjeros al juicio.
El contratista abandonó el tribunal en un auto negro del aparato de seguridad del Estado tras más de ocho horas de procedimientos. Luego salieron su esposa Judy Gross y diplomáticos de EU. "El asunto está en manos del panel (de jueces). La familia sigue confiando en que Alan regresará pronto a casa", dijo su abogado estadounidense Peter Kahn, en un breve comunicado.
Diplomáticos creen que pese a ser declarado culpable, Gross podría ser liberado por "razones humanitarias". El contratista fue detenido el 3 de diciembre del 2009 y pasó 15 meses sin que se presentara alguna acusación en su contra, lo que finalmente ocurrió en febrero. El caso frenó un acercamiento a Cuba iniciado por el presidente de EU, Barack Obama, quien exige la inmediata liberación de su connacional.
http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/internacional/71846.html
Recent Comments