Monday, May 31, 2010

Cuba to transfer political prisoners close to home

By ANNE-MARIE GARCIA (AP) - May 23, 2010

HAVANA - The Cuban government has agreed to move many of the country's 200
political prisoners to jails closer to their homes, and will give medical
attention to some ailing prisoners, a church official told The Associated
Press on Sunday.

The government's decision comes just days after a rare meeting between Cuban
President Raul Castro and two church leaders, including Cuban Cardinal Jaime
Ortega. After the meeting, Ortega said he was optimistic that there was
willingness on the government's side to compromise.

"The office of religious affairs of the central committee of the Cuban
Communist Party advised the Catholic Church on Friday that as of next week
the political prisoners will be transferred to jails in their place of
origin," Orlando Marquez, a Havana church official, told AP.

It was not clear if all of the political prisoners would be moved, or how
many of those who are ailing will receive treatment.

Marquez also said that a senior church leader, Havana auxiliary bishop Juan
de Dios Hernandez, had visited hunger-striking dissident Guillermo Farinas
in his home in central Cuba on Saturday to tell him of the government's
decision to move the prisoners.

Farinas has refused food for 89 days, though he receives nutrients through a
tube and has appeared strong and alert in recent phone conversations with
the AP.

Another Cuban dissident, Orlando Zapata Tamayo, died Feb. 23 after a lengthy
hunger strike in jail.

Farinas called his hunger strike to protest Zapata Tamayo's death, and has
said since then that his main demand is better treatment for 26 political
prisoners said to be in poor health.

He told the AP on Sunday that Hernandez had assured him that some of the
ailing political prisoners would be transferred to hospitals, though he did
not know how many.

Farinas said that "given the show of good faith" on the part of the
government, he would be willing to end his hunger strike if the government
provides church officials with a schedule for the liberation of the others.

The government had no immediate comment on the supposed concession. Cuba's
communist leaders have long denounced members of the opposition as common
criminals and paid stooges of Washington. As recently as this month, Cuban
officials have denied that the country holds any political prisoners.

But there have been several signs in recent weeks that Cuban leaders are
taking a more conciliatory approach to the dissidents.

On May 2, the government reversed a decision barring the Ladies in White -
composed of the wives and mothers of jailed dissidents - from holding their
weekly march. The breakthrough followed Ortega's mediation.

The meeting Wednesday between Ortega and Raul Castro was covered extensively
by state-controlled media, and a photo of the men and another church leader
was printed on the front page of the Communist Party-newspaper Granma.

The day after the meeting, Ortega said no deal had been reached on prisoner
releases, but he called the meeting - which lasted more than four hours - a
"magnificent start."

Another church leader who was at the meeting, Archbishop Dionisio Garcia,
told AP "that there was good will" on the part of the government on the
issue of dissidents.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The AP is a stooge for the US.This article shows us it by assuming that these prisoners are NOT created aggitators of the US.
The Ap adopts the Us version of truth.
I am sure they will be moved.Not like the five Cuban political prisoners in the US. Kept out of population and not allowed family visits for the past 11 years!