New York, September 2, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns the continued imprisonment of more than two dozen Cuban journalists,
several of whom have received inadequate medical care or been harassed
for protesting their conditions.
The Cuban government arrested 29 journalists in March 2003 in a massive
crackdown on the independent media. Accused of being "counterrevolutionaries"
at the service of the United States, the journalists were convicted after
summary trials behind closed doors. Only two have been released.
Several of the jailed journalists are suffering from deteriorating health.
Jorge Olivera Castillo was taken from a hospital in eastern Guantánamo
province to Agüica prison in western Matanzas province, according
to his wife, Nancy Alfaya. Olivera, who suffers from several ailments,
is being held at the prison's infirmary, but is receiving no medical treatment,
Alfaya told CPJ.
Another, Oscar Espinosa Chepe, has been hospitalized for more than a year
and his health continues to decline. His wife, Miriam Leyva, said the
family does not have access to his doctors, his medical tests, or treatment
records.
Raúl Rivero, who suffers from pulmonary emphysema, has been subjected
to harassment by prison officials, according to his wife, Blanca Reyes.
After Rivero's last family visit, on August 19, the prison's medical services
director told Reyes she could no longer deliver medicine to Rivero. Reyes,
who was warned by state security officers not to give statements about
Rivero's status, told CPJ that prison officials had suspended his September
11 marital visit after he argued with a security officer.
Fabio Prieto Llorente, a journalist who is jailed at Kilo 8 prison in
central Camagüey province, went on a hunger strike August 11 to demand
his transfer to a prison closer to his home, according to the independent
news agency Decoro. Prieto Llorente, who is from eastern Isla de la Juventud
province, subsequently ended his hunger strike and on August 30 was visited
by his mother and sister. He has been harassed for protesting his conditions,
according to Decoro.
Also in August, journalist Héctor Maseda was transferred to a cell
with repeat offenders in La Pendiente prison, according to his wife, Laura
Pollán. Maseda is concerned that prison authorities may use common
prisoners to harass him. Pollán also told CPJ that she and other
relatives of imprisoned journalists and opposition activists had formally
appealed to Cuban authorities to grant them amnesty, but government officials
have not responded to their request.
"The Cuban government continues to ignore international and domestic appeals
for the release of the imprisoned journalists," CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper said. "As long as these journalists are jailed, in violation
of international freedom of expression standards, we will continue to
demand their immediate and unconditional release."
Background
The Cuban government arrested a total of 29 journalists in the March
2003 crackdown, and tried them behind closed doors on April 3 and 4, 2003,
as the world's attention was focused on the war in Iraq.
Some journalists were tried under Article 91 of the Penal Code, which
imposes lengthy prison sentences or death for those who act against "the
independence or the territorial integrity of the State." Other journalists
were prosecuted for violating Law 88 for the Protection of Cuba's National
Independence and Economy, which calls for imprisonment of up to 20 years
for anyone who commits acts "aimed at subverting the internal order of
the nation and destroying its political, economic, and social system."
On April 7, 2003, courts across the island announced prison sentences
for the journalists ranging from 14 to 27 years. In June 2003, the People's
Supreme Tribunal, Cuba's highest court, dismissed the journalists' appeals
for annulment (recursos de casación) and upheld their convictions.
In June 2004, imprisoned journalist Carmelo Díaz Fernández
was granted a medical parole and sent home. At the time he was warned
that he would be sent back to prison if he recovered from his illnesses
or did not maintain "good behavior". Also in June, journalist Manuel Vázquez
Portal, CPJ's 2003 International Press Freedom Award winner, was released
without explanation. Upon his release, two state security officers suggested
that he leave the country.
The imprisoned journalists, most of whom are being held in maximum-security
facilities, have denounced their unsanitary prison conditions and inadequate
medical care. They have also complained of being fed foul-smelling and
rotten food. Unlike the general prison population, who receive more frequent
visits, most imprisoned journalists are allowed family visits every three
months and marital visits every five months.

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