LET'S FIGHT BACK

LET'S FIGHT BACK
GOD BLESS AMERICA

Friday, October 29, 2021

Free Cuba Now!


To promote a peaceful transition to a Cuba that respects human rights
and political and economic freedoms

 

Time for Havana to permit the Red Cross and other international human rights bodies access to inspect prisons in Cuba

Cuba is the only country in the Americas that Amnesty International, and most other independent human rights monitors, cannot visit. Consider that between 2002 and 2014 the International Committee of the Red Cross visited the United States detention facility at Guantanamo Bay Cuba 100 times to examine prison conditions there, and write critical reports. These visits have continued to the present day, with an average of four visits per year. During the same period of time the Cuban government, despite repeated requests by the ICRC, has had zero visits to its prisons on the island. Between 1959 and the present day, visits were only permitted between 1988 and 1989.

Cuban prisoner of  conscience in music video Patria y Vida now on hunger and thirst strike

This is why political prisoners, Maykel ‘Osorbo’ Castillo, risk dying on hunger strikes protesting unjust prison sentences, mistreatment, and poor prison conditions. Too many have died over the years, and the terrible conditions continue.

Speaking out and peacefully assembling for human rights in Cuba is punished by the Cuban government with violence, prison, and extrajudicial killings.

Nairobis Schery Suárez, wife of Cuban dissident Manuel Cuesta Morúa, who was reported missing last Monday, was arrested when she left her home and released on Tuesday morning under threats of prison for both her and her husband if they participated in a non-violent peaceful assembly on November 15th.

Nairobis Schery Suárez

This is why activists, human rights organizations and families of persons jailed in Cuba on April 21, 2021 urged the IACHR to conduct an in-person visit to Cuba in order to understand the situation, but this would require the Cuban government approving the visit. Something that has not taken place since 1989. This necessitates international outrage over this intolerable situation.

 

Pen America, October 27, 2021

Imprisoned Cuban Rapper Maykel ‘Osorbo’ Castillo Begins Hunger Strike

Castillo, a leader of the San Isidro Movement, remains imprisoned at the Pinar del Río prison since May 2021

October 27, 2021

(New York, NY) — Cuban artist and Latin Grammy-nominated rapper Maykel “Osorbo” Castillo, who has been detained at the maximum security Pinar del Río prison since May 2021, began a hunger strike today in protest of his imprisonment and Cuba’s broader crackdown on free expression. Since his latest arbitrary arrest, he has not been guaranteed due process. In a statement today, PEN America and PEN International called on the Cuban government to release Castillo immediately and to end their campaign of brutal repression against Cuban artists.

“We are both horrified and infuriated that the Cuban government continues to keep Maykel Castillo imprisoned merely for peacefully exercising his right to free expression. The fact that he has been pushed to the point where he is willing to put his life and body on the line is unconscionable. We are extremely concerned for him and fear for his life,” said Julie Trébault, director of the Artists at Risk Connection (ARC) at PEN America. “The unfounded charges against Castillo and the complete lack of due process he has received are part and parcel of the Cuban authorities’ ongoing efforts to silence dissent, intimidate artists, and restrict freedom of expression. We call on the Cuban government to drop all charges against Castillo and to cease the harassment and censorship of independent artists, writers, and thinkers.”

“The Cuban authorities try to justify their acts of violence and their escalating repression by inventing allegations against innocent artists and writers in order to silence them. Maykel Castillo Pérez is unjustly imprisoned for exercising his right to free expression, for writing a song, for criticizing his country’s government. Maykel’s case is emblematic of the situation faced by artists, writers, journalists, and human rights defenders in Cuba who criticize the government. It is a tragedy for the world that he has decided to go on hunger strike. Maykel must be released immediately. PEN International will continue to tirelessly defend our Cuban colleagues,” said Romana Cacchioli, executive director of PEN International.

Castillo is a leader of the San Isidro Movement, a collective of Cuban artists, journalists, and intellectuals, and coauthor of the viral song “Patria y Vida,” which became an anthem of the mass protests across the island in late July. On September 28, “Patria y Vida” was nominated for “Best Song of the Year” at the Latin Grammy Awards.

Castillo began his hunger strike today at the Pinar del Río prison in Havana, where he has remained imprisoned after being detained on May 31 of this year and charged by the Cuban Prosecutor’s Office with the crimes of “resistance” and “contempt.” On May 18, he was arrested and held in an unknown location for a week. He is not the only imprisoned artist who has been driven to complete a hunger strike in recent weeks: Fellow artist and activist Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara underwent a hunger strike from September 27 to October 14 and remains imprisoned.

On August 10, 2021, PEN America and PEN International, along with three partner organizations, issued a joint statement applauding the report submitted by NGO Prisoners Defenders to the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, which counted more than 120 repressive acts of all kinds against Castillo in a little over a year, in order to silence him from expressing his demands for fundamental freedoms and rights.

PEN America leads the Artists at Risk Connection (ARC), a program dedicated to assisting imperiled artists and fortifying the field of organizations that support them. ARC recently released A Safety Guide For Artists, a resource that offers practical strategies to help artists understand, navigate, and overcome risk, and features an interview with Cuban artist Tania Bruguera about the state of free expression on the island. If you or someone you know is an artist at risk, contact ARC.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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