New York, October 29, 2003The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) is concerned about the health of two imprisoned Cuban journalists
who began a hunger strike on October 18 to protest the mistreatment of
an imprisoned colleague.
Mario Enrique Mayo Hernández and Adolfo Fernández Saínz,
who are jailed at the Holguín Provincial Prison in eastern Cuba,
have joined four jailed dissidents in a hunger strike that began on October
18, according to Maydelín Guerra Àlvarez, Mayo Hernández's
wife.
The journalists and dissidents are together protesting the treatment of
journalist Iván Hernández Carrillo, who was placed in a
punishment cell after complaining about feeling sick.
Guerra Àlvarez first heard about the hunger strike on October 19
but could not travel to Holguín until October 27. She was not permitted
to see her husband, but a prison official confirmed that Mayo Hernández
had begun a hunger strike. The official refused to give any more information
about the other strikers.
Mayo Hernández, Fernández Saínz, and Hernández
Carrillo were sentenced to 20, 15, and 25 years, respectively, for acting
against "the independence or the territorial integrity of the State" and
for violating Law 88 for the Protection of Cuba's National Independence
and Economy.
This is the third hunger strike by imprisoned Cuban journalists. On August
15, Mayo Hernández went on a hunger strike to demand better food
and adequate medical attention. Fernández Saínz and Hernández
Carrillo, together with other opposition activists, later joined the hunger
strike, which ended on August 28. Three days later, journalists Manuel
Vázquez Portal and Normando Hernández González, who
were jailed in Boniato Prison, in the eastern province of Santiago de
Cuba, joined other jailed dissidents in a hunger strike that lasted one
week. In retaliation, Vázquez Portal was subsequently transferred
to Aguadores Prison, also in Santiago de Cuba, while Hernández
González was sent to a prison in the western province of Pinar
del Río.
The imprisoned journalists, who are being held in maximum-security facilities
and are handcuffed any time they leave their cells, have denounced unsanitary
prison conditions, inadequate medical attention, solitary confinement,
and lack of access to the press and television. They have also complained
about receiving foul-smelling and rotten food.
Mayo Hernández, Fernández Saínz, Hernández
Carrillo, Vázquez Portal, and Hernández González
are among a group of 28 independent Cuban journalists who were detained
in a massive government crackdown in March. Their one-day summary trials
were held in early April behind closed doors. On April 7, courts across
the island announced prison sentences for the journalists ranging from
14 to 27 years. They remained imprisoned in jails administered by the
State Security Department until April 24, when most were sent to prisons
located hundreds of miles from their homes.
In June, the People's Supreme Tribunal, Cuba's highest court, dismissed
the appeals for annulment (recursos de casación) filed in
April by the journalists and upheld their convictions.

|