INTIMIDATION AND HARASSMENT OF DISSIDENTS ON THE INCREASE
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Posted: 30 March 2000 In its report, 'Short term detention and harassment of dissidents,' Amnesty International details these and other punitive measures against the exercise of fundamental freedoms, including orchestrated acts of intimidation, loss of employment, travel restrictions, interrogations, house arrests, house searches and even telephone bugging. Physician Doctor Oscar ElĂas Biscet Gonz...lez was among some 260 dissidents detained around the time of the Ibero-American Summit in Havana last year. He has reportedly been detained over two dozen times since 1998. Most recently he was charged with "insult to the symbols of the homeland" for hanging the Cuban flag sideways in his home. For this and two similar offences he was sentenced to three years' imprisonment on 25 February this year. In December 1999 Nestor RodrĂguez Lobaina was reportedly detained in the early hours by State Security agents in Santiago de Cuba and taken to a mountainous area where the agents held their guns as if to shoot him, shouting "Get down, we're going to do away with you." He was then abandoned in a remote area and told not to return to Santiago. Mark Lattimer, Director of Communications of Amnesty International UK, said: "The Cuban Government clearly believes that the repression of peaceful dissent through systematic intimidation and harassment will be seen as more acceptable to the international community than long-term imprisonment. We urge the UK Government to tell Cuba that any suppression of the freedom of expression and assembly is unacceptable." Amnesty International is calling on the Cuban Government to guarantee all Cuban citizens - including journalists, human rights defenders and political activists - full freedom of expression, association and assembly, and to immediately release all prisoners of conscience.
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