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Cuban authorities accused of 'communications blockade' of activists during Pope's visit

Call on Pope to speak out after activists’ phone lines cut

Cuban human rights activists are facing a surge in harassment in a bid to silence them during the Pope's visit, Amnesty International said today.
 
The clampdown has seen an increase in arrests, activists’ phones have been disconnected and some have had their houses surrounded to prevent them denouncing abuses during Pope Benedict’s tour. Local human rights organisations, including the Cuban Commission on Human Rights and National Reconciliation, have had their phone lines cut off since Monday. The mobile phones of prominent activists and government critics are also suddenly unreachable.
 
Meanwhile, on Monday dozens of government opponents were detained in Santiago de Cuba where the Pope gave a public mass at the start of his visit. Police and state security officers also surrounded the homes of many opponents and kept them under siege preventing them from attending the Pope’s mass or moving freely.
 
Short-term detentions of government opponents, human rights activists and independent journalists are routine in Cuba. In the lead up to the Pope’s visit, hundreds of government opponents were detained for short-periods of time, threatened or prevented from travelling freely.
 
Amnesty International Special Advisor Javier Zúñiga said:

“The communications blockade and the detention of more than 150 political opponents is yet another example of how the authorities in Cuba completely disregard human rights.

“The Cuban authorities must urgently stop harassing activists and ensure everybody in Cuba is free to voice their opinions so activists can carry out their legitimate activities.

“In view of this situation, which contradicts his appeal for a ‘more open society’ in Cuba, the Pope should take a stand and lend his voice to those that have been left voiceless due to the ongoing repression and condemn the lack of freedoms in Cuba.”
 
 

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