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Organizations denounce numerous arbitrary arrests, restrictions and Internet service cuts that aim to prevent demonstrations against police violence in Cuba (Demo)

At least 132 people, including artists, journalists, and activists, were victims of arrests, restrictions on leaving their houses and internet service cuts when they participated in or reported on protests against police violence.

On 30 June, Cuba’s State Security Department led operations against artists, journalists and activists, who were arrested on the street and held in their homes against their will. Of these, 48 were arrested and 84 were under arrest or surveillance. The reported interruption of mobile phone services was carried out by the communications company ETECSA.

The violation of these people’s rights to assembly, freedom of expression and of movement by the Cuban government took place in the context of a call shared on social media to protest on 30 June against the murder of Hansel Ernesto Hernandez Galiano, who was killed on 24 June in the township of Guanabacoa, Province of Havana, by officers of the National Revolutionary Police. Independent media on the island reported that the young man was shot in the back and that his body was cremated afterwards as a hygienic measure amid the COVID-19 pandemic. It is not known if an autopsy was performed nor is there any knowledge of its results[1].

Therefore, artists organized a peaceful protest in the Vedado area of Havana, to demonstrate against police violence, and to demand, among other things, a public trial and the punishment of the responsible officer, as well as the release of the country’s political prisoners.

Nonetheless, measures like the ones taken by the Cuban government yesterday, an operation which had already been launched on 29 June in several provinces across the country, are due to a form of prior censorship in which the use of detention and restrictions on freedom of movement, as well as the interference by the state entity ETECSA in people’s access to communication services, are means to prevent the exercise of the right to peaceful protest, journalism and free expression.

Regarding recent events, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights report of 2019, “Situation of Human Rights in Cuba”[2], identified a pattern in the use of arbitrary arrests as a method of harassment by the police and State security agents. According to the IACHR, such detentions are intended to discourage the expression of views critical of the government, hinder the free expression of opinions and ideas, and impede the work of defense and promotion of fundamental rights.

On the other hand, concerning freedom of movement, the IACHR has indicated how the restrictions on this right are intended to prevent human rights defenders from issuing and participating in critical statements or collective dissent within the country or abroad[3], as occurred in the denounced situation, although it has been reported, as of the time of writing, that all of those detained have been released.

As for the limitations to the right to free expression on the Internet achieved by cutting off the service, the IACHR has indicated that its selective nature is harmful as it contravenes the principle of universal access. Furthermore, the reasons for these restrictions directly confront pluralism and diversity, which are vital elements in the process of public debate and free expression that ought to prevail just as much in a digital environment.[4]

In light of this situation, the undersigned organizations demand that the Cuban government allow peaceful protests to take place, refrain from continuing to harass and interfere in the communication of those who participate in or report on them, and release without any charge or punishment all those who have been arrested.

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1. “Un joven muere en Guanabacoa presuntamente a manos de la policía.” Available at: https://www.14ymedio.com/nacional/Guanabacoa-policia-Cuba_0_2900109969.html . Consulted on 30 June 2020.

2. Country Report on the situation of human rights in Cuba. IACHR (2020). Available at: http://www.oas.org/es/cidh/informes/pdfs/Cuba2020-es.pdf. para. 178, p. 75. Consulted on 30 June 2020.

3. Ibid Para. 174 p.73

4. Ibid Para. 174 p.73

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Source: MEDIA FEED

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