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NEWS
Press freedom group calls on Cuba to free journalists
By Carol J. Williams, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 15, 2008
GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA -- The free-press advocacy group Reporters Without
Borders appealed Friday to Cuban leader Raul Castro to free 19
journalists still jailed in Cuba five years after a crackdown on critics
of the regime.
The international group, which is banned from visiting the
Communist-ruled island in any journalistic capacity, sent an undercover
reporter to assess the climate for free speech under the recently
changed leadership.
Fidel Castro, Raul's brother, stepped down from the presidency last
month after 49 years of rule.
Though the media watchdogs continue to decry strict limits on
journalists outside the state's closely controlled information sources,
the reporter who visited Cuba during the last week of February described
a resilient and growing force of writers and bloggers at work
disseminating independent views and analysis.
"The simple fact of no longer sensing Fidel's threatening form over our
heads has helped ease the pressure," Yoani Sanchez, one of Cuba's most
influential independent bloggers, told the reporter.
More independent journalists are now at work in the country than before
the March 2003 "Black Spring" arrests of 75 political and rights
activists, including 27 journalists.
Eight of the jailed reporters have been freed over the last five years,
but relatives and colleagues of those still in prison attribute those
releases to gestures of the Cuban government aimed at winning
cooperative relations with European states. At least four more reporters
have been detained since.
"This was not a humanitarian gesture but rather a trade-off in exchange
for the goodwill of Europe, and Spain in particular," said Laura Pollan,
wife of Hector Maseda Gutierrez, a rights group founder serving a
20-year sentence at a prison in Matanzas.
The European Union imposed diplomatic sanctions after the crackdown on
dissent, but most have been eased over the last year, led by Spain,
which is heavily invested in Cuba's resurgent tourism industry.
Last month, Havana released four rights activists to the Spanish
government ahead of a visit by a Vatican envoy. The Cuban government
also signed two U.N. human rights conventions that Fidel Castro long
refused to support, contending they represented interference in the
island's domestic affairs.
Reporters Without Borders called on the Cuban government to release the
critics still in prison and allow free expression in the country.
The organization also appealed to European embassies in Havana to open
their doors to the dissident press and urged the U.S. government to lift
restrictions on Cuban access to the Internet and international contacts.
carol.williams@latimes.com
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