• This is a political forum that is non-biased/non-partisan and treats every person's position on topics equally. This debate forum is not aligned to any political party. In today's politics, many ideas are split between and even within all the political parties. Often we find ourselves agreeing on one platform but some topics break our mold. We are here to discuss them in a civil political debate. If this is your first visit to our political forums, be sure to check out the RULES. Registering for debate politics is necessary before posting. Register today to participate - it's free!

Obama hails ‘courageous’ late Cuban dissident

CUBA: WIDESPREAD BRUTAL REPRESSION AND IMPUNITY
CUBA: WIDESPREAD BRUTAL REPRESSION AND IMPUNITY | Babalú Blog

By Alberto de la Cruz, on November 7, 2011

Following a savage beating and arrest, a human rights defender is suffering the same physical symptoms as the recently deceased Lady in White, Laura Pollan

November 6, 2011

Alcides Rivera Rodriguez and Rolando Ferrer Espinosa, two activists on a hunger strike since September 28, 2011, protesting the Cuban regime’s violence against peaceful activists in the island; both admitted respectively, on October 27 and 28, 2011, to the Provincial Hospital Arnaldo Milian in the central city of Santa Clara, were forced out of the medical center by special police forces that had militarized the building. Ferrer Espinosa, was hoisted away on Monday, October 31st to his home in spite of the fact that he was on supplemental oxygen, was shaking due to a high fever, is weak after losing more than 30 lbs. of body weight, and has severe respiratory ailments as well as metabolic acidosis. On November 2,, Alcides Rivera, who was diagnosed with bronchopneumonia and has lost almost 60 lbs, was also forcibly taken out of the hospital. Both Alcides and Rolando declared that they will continue their hunger strike.
The island of Dr. Castro is a big jail where the regime jailers physically and mentally abuse their victims. They have locked the doors and thrown away the keys. Practically most people care less if the Castroit regime continues for many more years. The Cuban people have been victims of the longest running tyranny in the history of the Western Hemisphere, 53 years and counting.
 
I am the other Cuba’: Italian documentary on Laura Pollan captures a mysterious ‘accident’ on film
‘I am the other Cuba’: Italian documentary on Laura Pollan captures a mysterious ‘accident’ on film | Babalú Blog

By Alberto de la Cruz, on October 30, 2011, at 8:48 am

Italian filmmaker Pierantonio Maria Micciarelli traveled to Cuba to film a documentary on Laura Pollan and the Ladies in White. After meeting with Laura and the rest of the peaceful opposition women in Cuba, Micciarelli made this interesting and profound statement (my translation):

"When I was young, I was fascinated by the myth of the revolution, but being in Cuba, I saw another face and another reality."

In the following video there is a clip from Micciarelli's documentary where he is interviewing Laura Pollan in the backseat of a car as they travel down the road. Suddenly, the car mysteriously swerves and crashes, all while the camera is rolling. Although no one was hurt in the accident, the driver tells Micciarelli he has serious doubts what had just happened was an "accident." When asked if he thought the accident was provoked, the driver responded:

"It was deliberate, I have no doubt. Above all, it is a message they are sending. Perhaps the purpose was not homicide, but if they all died... oh well."
Video:
It is frustrating that despite the regime known disregard for human rights, despite the documented executions, imprisonments and disappearances, the MSM disseminate the tyranny's version of Laura Pollan's death as coincidental without questioning it, dismissing Laura’s death as an accident, not as a something orchestrated by the regime. They call the people who take part in acts of repudiation against the Ladies in White opponents, not state security agent which is what they are.
 
Oposición y represión en Cuba (Opposition and repression in Cuba)

A five minutes beautiful tribute video to Laura Pollán.
Oposición y represión en Cuba - YouTube
Martí believed that freedom is indispensable for the advancement of society. Marxist-Leninists attempts to seek support for their ideology in Martí will be futile. He believed that there cannot be solutions for mankind as a whole without freedom for individuals to better themselves. Martí's thought were to permits men to struggle and experiment and demand those truly fundamental changes that will create a society favorable to the "total dignity of man."
 
Anti- government protest at Havana’s Fraternity Park
Human rights activists in Cuba violently arrested and bystanders pepper-sprayed after courageous public protest | Babalú Blog

By Alberto de la Cruz (translation), on December 1, 2011,

Activists displayed a sheet with the words "Stop the lies and deception of the Cuban people" and "End the hunger, the misery, and the poverty in Cuba"

Agentes+esposan+a+Ivonne+al+derribarla+al+suelo.webpActivists Ivonne Malleza and Blanca Hernández Moya led a protest this Wednesday against the island's government at the Fraternity Park in Havana, say sources from the dissidence.

Malleza Galano, who is 33, and Hernandez Moya, 77, displayed a sheet with the phrases "Stop the lies and deception of the Cuban people" and "End the hunger, the misery, and the poverty in Cuba," said Mayra Morejon to CUBAENCUENTRO, who was also present at the protest.
The public protest initiated by Cuban human rights activists at the Fraternity Park in Havana was quickly quashed by Castro State Security with several activists and bystanders being violently arrested. The protest was led by two women of Cuba's peaceful opposition movement, Ivonne Malleza and Blanca Hernández Moya. Their act of protest against the repressive Castro dictatorship was highlighted by the support they received from the large crowd of bystanders when the Cuban State Security agents attempted to arrest them. The crowd surrounded the women in an attempt to protect them from the agents, forcing the security officials to pepper spray the people in order to reach the two women.
 
Video of the protest on November 30 at Havana’s Fraternity Park


This is one of the most recent examples of the great achievements of the Revolution, the physical abuse of women demonstrating peacefully. Clearly it can be seeing and hear a lot of public support, something that is occurring with more frequency. The Cuban people are fed up with the Castroit regime disaster and it is only a matter of time that this type of protests will evolve into the Caribbean spring.
 
Cuban dissidents: Colleagues injured in police crackdown
Cuban dissidents: Colleagues injured in police crackdown - Cuba - MiamiHerald.com

The dissidents say they want police to free 10 dissidents arrested.
By Juan O. Tamayo
jtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com
Posted 12.06.11

Cuban dissidents vowed to protest at a State Security office Tuesday unless police free 10 government critics detained in a crackdown where several suffered head wounds, a broken rib and other injuries.

Police also severely beat Angel Moya, a well known former political prisoner, in a lockup because he would not stop shouting anti-government slogans, according to the dissidents. There was no word on his condition.
This confrontations are becoming more frequent and will not end, as the Cuban people begins to revolt against 53 years of repressive control over every aspect of their lives by the Castroit tyrannical regime.

Soon the confrontations will become more violent and deaths will occur. As the action by the people gain momentum, it will not be possible by the regime to stopped, and the Castroit regime will be history.
 
Castros state security agents have carried out 3,327 such “temporal detentions” so far this year, compared to 2,074 in all of 2010, according to a report from Havana on Monday by the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation.
 
This confrontations are becoming more frequent and will not end, as the Cuban people begins to revolt against 53 years of repressive control over every aspect of their lives by the Castroit tyrannical regime.

Soon the confrontations will become more violent and deaths will occur. As the action by the people gain momentum, it will not be possible by the regime to stopped, and the Castroit regime will be history.

I hope you are right. And may those who voiced their support for this evil dictatorship over the years be publicly humiliated for being the inhumane trash they are.
 
Cuba stops dissident Rights Day protest, 200 held
Cuba stops dissident Rights Day protest, 200 held | Top News | Reuters

By Jack Kimball and Nelson Acosta
Dec 10, 2011

HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuban dissidents said on Saturday that about 200 people were temporarily detained by the Communist-run island's security services in the days leading up to an international human rights celebration.

Government supporters danced salsa and chanted political slogans in a Havana square to mark the 63rd anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by the United Nations.

Opposition members who had planned to celebrate Human Rights Day in the same place, and protest against abuses in Cuba, were blocked from going to the square, dissidents said.

"Some 200 detentions for political motives have taken plan in the last nine days in the lead up to the international Human Rights Day," said Elizardo Sanchez of the independent Cuban Commission of Human Rights said.
Castros’ tyranny, which is a member of United Nations Human Rights, celebrated Human Rights Day with a crackdown on around 200 Cuban human rights activists. The oppression in the island is vast and wide. Long Live Human Rights!
 
Last edited:
Dr. Gustavo Gutierrez y Sanchez, Cuban Lawyer, Jurist, Politician, Diplomat and Economist, wrote a book entitled "La Carta Magna de la Comunidad de las Naciones (The Magna Carta of the Community of Nations) in 1945. At the San Francisco Conference the Republic of Cuba submitted two proposals for consideration, a "Draft Declaration of the International Rights and Duties of the Individual" and a “Draft Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Nations.” These two drafts were written and presented by Dr. Gustavo Gutierrez in his book.
 
John P. Humphrey prepared the first draft for the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1947. In the Human Rights Quarterly, Vol. 5, No. 4, “Memoirs of John P. Humphrey, the First Director of the United Nations Division of Human Rights”, he stated: “I was no Thomas Jefferson and, although a lawyer, I had had practically no experience drafting documents. But since the Secretariat had collected a score of drafts, I had some models on which to work. One of them had been prepared by Gustavo Gutierrez (Sanchez) and had probably inspired the draft Declaration of the International Duties and Rights of the Individual which Cuba had sponsored at the San Francisco Conference.” He was right, those were the documents written in Gutierrez book. Gutierrez draft for the creation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was chosen as one of the drafts presented by the Secretariat.

Dr. Gutierrez draft exercised a great influence in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the United Nations in 1948. Below you will find a link to a preamble of three proposed drafts. In the draft "Universal Declaration of Human Rights #2", the one by Dr. Gustavo Gutierrez is the one in the middle.
GUSTAVO GUTIERREZ Y SANCHEZ: Universal Declarations of Human Rights #2
 
I don't think President Obama should interfere in the internal affairs of the Cuban people. He needs to work on creating good paying jobs instead.
 
Ironically the Castros’ regime, a member of United Nations Human Rights Council, doesn’t allow the distribution of copies of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, since it is considers “enemy propaganda.” Persons distributing copies are harassed and detained. The wolf guarding the sheep.

The regime law limits freedom of expression, association, assembly, movement, and the press. International human rights organizations accuse the Castros’ regimen of human rights abuses like arbitrary imprisonment, unfair trials, torture of political prisoners and extrajudicial executions. The Human Rights Council has specifically declined to consider these violations that routinely occur in Cuba.
 
Neighbors Chose to Not Cooperate with Mob Attack Against Lady in White
Neighbors Chose to Not Cooperate with Mob Attack Against Lady in White « Pedazos de la Isla

Posted by Pedazos de la Isla on January 9, 2012

The home of Lady in White Caridad Burunate Gomez, located in Colon, Matanzas, was the target of a failed mob repudiation attack this past Thursday, January 5th. Accompanying Caridad were some relatives, among them her husband (and also dissident) Francisco Rangel and also the former political prisoners of the group of the 75, Iván Hernández Carrillo and Félix Navarro.

The Lady in White narrated that she had known there was going to be an act of repudiation against her that day, for her neighbors had informed her that in their jobs they had ben visited by agents of the regime who had told them that it was mandatory to assist the acts of aggression that night at 8:30. “The agents said that if the workers did not go, then they would be fired from their jobs”, explained Burunate Gomez. Regardless, the only people who joined in on the verbal violence were “only government officials. They parked 10 police vehicles nearby and began to shout slogans against us. But everyday neighbors did not show up“.
Well done by the neighbors. Cubans are resisting the Castros tyranny by supporting their fellow citizens and not the tyrannical regime.
 
Jailed Cuban dissident dies at 31
http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/01/19/2598480/jailed-cuban-dissident-dies-at.html

BY Juan Carlos Chavez
jcchavez@elNuevoHerald.com
Posted on Thursday, 01.19.12

The young Cuban dissenter Wilman Villar, who 50 days ago began a hunger strike in his jail cell in response to his imprisonment, died Thursday night in the Juan Bruno Zayas de Santiago hospital in Cuba.

Villar, who was 31, became a martyr of the opposition movement in defense of individual liberties and human rights in Cuba. Villar was being kept alive by a respirator for several days before his condition deteriorated. He developed a sepsis infection that spread through his bloodstream in his final hours. Doctors alerted his family, stating that "only a miracle" could save his life.

The complication mortally wounded his liver and intestines, according to doctors. On Thursday, his wife, Maritza Pelegrino, said state agents will not allow her to see her husband's body. Villar was serving a four-year jail sentence at the time of his death.
Another prisoner of conscience died in a hunger strike under the Castros regime. The Dissident’s death highlights the repressive tactics of the regime. It uses capricious arrests, fake trials, harsh imprisonment, and harassment of dissidents’ families, in order to silence its critics.
 
Wiman death after 50 days of a hunger strike is a demonstration that there are Cuban dissidents capable of fighting the regime all the way to the limit. The Castros regime doesn’t make any concession that could be interpreted as weakness, since it doesn’t has any future whatsoever. The one that had a future was Wilman, 31 years old and with a wife and two girls, but the regime elected to let him die.

It is really quite amazing how CBS News has completely given up on even trying to give the appearance their reports on Cuba are objective. This news report goes way beyond irresponsible and lazy journalism and can be honestly classified as pure propaganda
 
One of the few non violent ways to be heard in the Castro brothers 53 years paradise is going in a hunger strike as an act of political protest. It is very sad that these hunger strikes have to be used to bring world opinion to bear against the oppression and denial of freedom by the two tyrants and force change.
 
Statement by the Press Secretary on the Death of Cuban Activist Wilmar Villar
Statement by the Press Secretary on the Death of Cuban Activist Wilmar Villar | The White House

For Immediate Release January 20, 2012

President Obama’s thoughts and prayers are with the wife, family, and friends of Wilmar Villar, a young and courageous defender of human rights and fundamental freedoms in Cuba who launched a hunger strike to protest his incarceration and succumbed to pneumonia.

Villar’s senseless death highlights the ongoing repression of the Cuban people and the plight faced by brave individuals standing up for the universal rights of all Cubans. The United States will not waver in our support for the liberty of the Cuban people. We will remain steadfast in our outreach to the Cuban people through unlimited Cuban American family visits and remittances, purposeful travel, and humanitarian assistance to dissidents and their families in support of their legitimate desire to freely determine Cuba’s future.
The White House did the right thing acknowledging the death of Wilman Villar Mendoza, and condemning the repression of the Castros regime that causes his death.
 
Prison Death Brings Outcry Against Cuba
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/21/world/americas/cuba-is-condemned-after-prisoners-death.html?_r=1

By DAMIEN CAVE
Published: January 20, 2012

MEXICO CITY — Human rights advocates and American officials condemned the Cuban government on Friday for continuing to limit political freedom, reacting to the death of an imprisoned Cuban dissident who had carried out a hunger strike to protest his sentence.

The dissident, Wilman Villar Mendoza, 31, died Thursday after 50 days without food, according to relatives. He was at least the second political prisoner known to die of a hunger strike since President Raúl Castro took over from his brother Fidel in 2006, highlighting what experts describe as the new Cuban model: cautious moves toward a more open economy, coupled with continued repression of dissent.

“Human rights conditions in Cuba remain poor,” said William Ostick, a State Department spokesman. “The Cuban government continues to limit fundamental freedoms, including freedoms of speech, including for members of the press, and of peaceful assembly.”
Cuba denies holding political prisoners and in a statement late Friday said that Mr. Villar “was not a dissident nor was he on a hunger strike,” saying he died of sepsis after being hospitalized.

Human rights advocates say there is no way to know how many government opponents remain in jail because independent investigators cannot visit. They acknowledge some progress. In 2010, Mr. Castro agreed to free 52 prisoners who had been arrested during a 2003 crackdown. The Cuban government also decided to release 2,900 inmates late last year, but human rights defenders on and off the island say dissidents were not released. The selective pardon itself led to protests, and after the pardons, another inmate — who advocates said was not a political prisoner — died of a hunger strike to protest his exclusion from the list.

Those on the island trying to lobby for greater freedom also say these releases have not affected patterns of state repression. For example, Mr. Villar Mendoza’s wife, Maritza Pelegrino Cabrales, told Human Rights Watch that government officials had harassed her repeatedly for associating with the Ladies in White, a group of wives, mothers and daughters of political prisoners who often endure threats and assaults when they protest publicly in Havana. Ms. Pelegrino said state security officers threatened to take away her daughters, 7 and 5.
“We’re all afraid,” said a neighbor who answered Ms. Pelegrino’s cellphone Friday because she had gone to her husband’s funeral. “Maritza doesn’t know what’s going to happen with her children. She’s worried.”

Mr. Villar Mendoza was detained Nov. 2 after participating in what his wife described as a peaceful demonstration for political freedom and human rights. She said prison guards placed him in solitary confinement after he started his hunger strike on Nov. 25. The last time she was allowed to visit him was on Dec. 29.
The words of Fidel Castro return like a boomerang to haunt him and his tyrannical regime. On September 15, 1981, Fidel Castro gave the opening speech at the 63rd conference of the Interparliamentary Union, which was held in Havana. These are Castro's remarks on the Irish Republican Army who died during the hunger strike. Here it is from the “horse” mouth
In my opinion, Irish patriots are writing one of the most heroic chapters in human history. They have earned the respect and admiration of the world, and likewise they deserve its support. Ten of them have already died in the most moving gesture of sacrifice, selflessness and courage one could ever imagine.

Humanity should feel ashamed that this terrible crime is committed before its very eyes. These young fighters do not ask for independence nor make impossible demands to put an end to their strike; they ask only for something as simple as the recognition of what they actually are: political prisoners.

The stubbornness, intransigence, cruelty, insensitivity before the international community of the British Government faced with the problem of Irish patriots on hunger strikes until death, remind us of Torquemada and the barbarity of the inquisition in the middle ages.

Let tyrants tremble before men who are capable of dying for their ideals after 60 days of hunger strike! What were Christ's three days in Calvary, an age-old symbol of human sacrifice, compared to that example?

It is high time for the world community to put an end to this repulsive atrocity through denunciation and pressure!
Indeed it is. This is one of the few times that I agree with the Tyrannosaurus Rex.
 
What Wilman Villar's tragic death tells us about today's Cuba
What Wilman Villar's tragic death tells us about today's Cuba | Fox News

By Mike Gonzalez
Published January 24, 2012

The tragic death of Cuban dissident Wilman Villar after a 50-day hunger strike should make clear that the Cuban people seek freedom and are increasingly willing to defy a repressive regime to get it.

They deserve outside moral support, which is best expressed by a repudiation of the regime that brutalizes them, not by establishing relations that would only legitimize the dictatorship of the Castro brothers.

The Obama administration has already begun to take steps in the direction of progressively establishing links with Cuba.

It has relaxed travel restrictions and remittances to Cuba, therefore replenishing the generals’ hard-currency coffers and helping to validate their unelected, illegal and repressive regime.
The International Community shall be urged to condemn the Castros tyrannical regime for the death of Cuban dissident Wilman Villar Mendoza. As Martin Luther King said “We shall overcome.”
 
It is very important to let the world know about the daily risks that Cuba's pro-democracy eaders are taking to confront the Castro's brutal dictatorship and the sacrifices being made for the cause of freedom.
 
Videos smuggled out of Cuba tell the real story of life under the yoke of the tyranny
Videos smuggled out of Cuba tell the real story of life under the yoke of the tyranny | Babalú Blog

By Alberto de la Cruz, on January 28, 2012

Three must-watch videos smuggled out of Cuba tell the real story of life under the yoke of the tyrannical Castro dictatorship:

Maritza Pelegrino, the wife of murdered Cuban human rights activist and prisoner of conscience Wilman Villar Mendoza, tells the truth about the Castro regime's physical and character assassination of her husband:


"Who is Lying?": A documentary on the death of Wilman Villar Mendoza, including the testimony of his wife and independent journalist Jose Daniel Ferrer:


A video taken in Palma Soriano Cuba showing courageous human rights activists taking to the streets and banging on pots to protest the vile and murderous Castro dictatorship:
These videos can be very revealing, especially to compare what is said in it with respect to the attacks and denials launched by the regime control press. It is evident in the video the manipulation that the Granma newspaper and the regime have done of the unfortunate death of Wilman.
 
They will pay for all their crimes, the murderers, the Castro brothers and their family who are responsible for the deaths of so many Cubans. Wilmar death will not be the last blood spilled for the definitive freedom of the Cuban people. The paid figureheads of the tyranny will be pursue and brought to justice, and the property obtained product of their theft and forcible appropriation of the property of others, will be taken away from them.
 
Wilman Villar Mendoza: The Death of a Dissident
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/yoani-sanchez/cuba-dissidents_b_1253110.html

Yoani Sanchez
02/03/2012

The punishment cell is narrow, is five feet wide by two long, cold and there is not even a blanket for cover. From the hole in the floor that serves as a toilet, a rat occasionally emerges and looks curiously at the curled up man lying there. Outside shouts are heard, metal banging, and the general noise of the Aguadores prison, one of the most feared in eastern Cuba. This scene, common in our prison system, was repeated in early January and was had as its protagonist a young man of 31.

He was called Wilman Villar Mendoza and was arrested on November 14, 2011 while participating in an anti-government protest in the streets of Contramaestre, his hometown. In images broadcast after his death, he is seen at the head of a group carrying the Cuban flag, while the astonished passerbys do not know whether to join the crowd or to shout down the demonstrators. Probably the memories of that place passed through his head again and again while he shivered within the damp walls of the dungeon, but that we can never confirm. Because of that place he would only emerge -- already dying -- to the hospital and finally to a grave in the cemetery.
A powerful statement on Mendoza's death from Yoani Sanchez, one of Cuba's most high-profile bloggers. Wilman Villar Mendoza died a hero, not only because of his courage to stand against the Castroit tyrannical regime for his convictions, but because of the steadfast dignity of his sacrifice. He was subjected to unimaginable brutality and inhumanity, tortured physically and psychologically. But he never gave in and never gave up.
 
Mendoza never relented since he knew that the suffering he endured, the degradation forced upon him and the cruelty he was subjected to was not about one man. It wasn’t only about the usurpation of his rights and imprisonment, or about the injustice and indignity unleashed upon him. He sacrificed and died so that 11.2 million Cubans would will be free of the Castroit tyrannical regime that killed him.
 
Back
Top Bottom