Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06HAVANA15749
2006-08-09 11:49:00
CONFIDENTIAL
US Interests Section Havana
Cable title:  

ANTI-DISSIDENT ACTIVITIES CONTINUE IN CUBA

Tags:  PHUM KDEM PREL SOCI CU 
pdf how-to read a cable
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P 091149Z AUG 06
FM USINT HAVANA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2994
INFO RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES PRIORITY
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 HAVANA 015749 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE DEPT FOR WHA/CCA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/08/2016
TAGS: PHUM KDEM PREL SOCI CU
SUBJECT: ANTI-DISSIDENT ACTIVITIES CONTINUE IN CUBA

HAVANA 00015749 001.2 OF 002


Classified By: COM Michael Parmly for Reason 1.4(d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 HAVANA 015749

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE DEPT FOR WHA/CCA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/08/2016
TAGS: PHUM KDEM PREL SOCI CU
SUBJECT: ANTI-DISSIDENT ACTIVITIES CONTINUE IN CUBA

HAVANA 00015749 001.2 OF 002


Classified By: COM Michael Parmly for Reason 1.4(d).


1. (C) Summary: Cuban regime agents continue to carry out
"acts of repudiation" and other aggressive actions against
pro-democracy activists, but to no greater or lesser extent
than before the July 31 announcement of Fidel Castro's
temporary withdrawal. Since then, at least five
anti-dissident incidents have occurred, we learned August 8
in separate talks with eight activists. Apart from the
August 6 march by the "Ladies in White," dissidents have
organized only one event since the annoucement: A few members
of a small opposition group in Havana marched with placards
and chants, but police quickly ended the protest and hauled
the participants off to jail. The Ladies deny media reports
that they aimed their August 6 appeal for the liberation of
their political-prisoner relatives at Raul Castro. Streets
in the capital remain quiet, possibly due to security-force
mobilization. Several activists make clear they will not
support Raul, and have passed on rumors of a power struggle
in the Politburo between Raul supporters and Ricardo Alarcon.
End Summary.


2. (C) Cuban pro-democracy activists continue to be subjected
to "acts of repudiation" and other abuse by Communist
militants, but the level of harassment does not appear to
have changed since the GOC's July 31 announcement that Fidel
Castro was temporarily stepping down. Since then, at least
three acts of repudiation and two official police warnings
have been carried out against dissidents. The most intense
incident occurred in the city of Las Tunas, targeting Yamile
Llanes, a Lady in White. On August 3, Llanes was home with
her four children and seven of their friends when around 100
people approached the home, threw stones and threatened to
burn it down, according to Miriam Leyva, an independent
journalist and leading Lady in White. No one was injured.
The other two acts of repudiation, held hours after the
announcement, occurred in Havana and targeted Lady in White
Gisela Delgado and Edel Garcia Diaz, one of the 75 peaceful

activists detained in the March 2003 crackdown.

THREATS OF IMPRISONMENT
--------------


3. (C) Two State Security officials paid an August 4 visit to
the home of dissident Michael de Miranda in Santa Clara,
according to his father, Roberto de Miranda. The officials
allegedly told him that if he continues to speak out as part
of the Marti Youth Coalition (CJM),he will be imprisoned for
between 12 and 18 months. The same day, police in the city
of Urbano Noris (Holguin Province) took Walter Ben Guria of
the Cuban Liberal Movement (MLC) to a police station,
interrogated him for two hours and threatened him with
incarceration for "dangerousness," according to Leon Padron
Azcuy, MLC president.

STREETS QUIET
--------------


4. (C) The capital, eight days after the July 31
announcement, remains calm on the surface. Apart from the
August 6 Santa Rita march by the Ladies in White, dissidents
have stayed out of the line of fire. Dissidents held a small
protest on or about August 5 in the Havana neighborhood of
Regla, according to Jorge Olivera, a writer and (freed) 75er.
Quoting a family member who lives there, Olivera said a few
members of an obscure dissident group named "Sons of the
Virgin of Regla" took to the street with placards and chants.
"But the police snuffed out the protest instantly, and took
the participants off to jail." Overall, Olivera adds, "The
terror is too much for people to go out and demonstrate."

"LIKE MOUNT SAINT HELENS"
--------------


5. (C) Edgard Lopez, head of the CJM, Cuba's most influential
opposition youth organization, says the situation is
volatile. "The streets are quiet, but Cuba is like Mount
Saint Helens; it could blow at any time." He adds, "No one
wants to be a martyr, but things happen." Lopez says most
CJM members are keeping a low profile, for two main reasons:
Soldiers armed with rifles have appeared in the streets, and
State Security did a thorough job in recent weeks of meeting
with dissidents and letting them know the GOC would have no
qualms about throwing them in prison for the slightest
infraction.

REGIME SPREADS WAR RUMORS
--------------


HAVANA 00015749 002.2 OF 002



6. (C) Stoked by incessant regime propaganda, the rumor mill
circulates the idea that there may be an impending US-Cuba
war. Ladies in White Soledad Rivas and Margarita Borges
Candelario said August 8 this is one reason more people are
staying off the streets. Roberto de Miranda says another
factor is that with an increased police and informant
presence in the streets, people are afraid they'll be
detained if they appear in a group outside. De Miranda adds
that more people are being stopped for random police checks
since the July 31 announcement. Poloff repeated the
President and SecState's messages to the effect that there is
no US invasion in the offing.

"LADIES" DENY APPEALING TO RAUL
--------------


7. (C) Leyva says media reports were incorrect in stating
that the Ladies in White appealed August 6 to Raul Castro to
free their political-prisoner relatives. "We never mentioned
Raul," she says. "We just demanded the release of the
political prisoners, same as we have every Sunday since March

2003. The only thing different this time was that it was our
first march since this provisional government was announced."
Reaction to the rise of Raul Castro has been varied, but
most activists are wary. Says Lopez: "They say Raul is a
pragmatist, but we can't accept his leadership; as a leader,
he is as illegitimate as Fidel." Padron Azcuy says: "We're
going to keep pushing for the release of political prisoners.
Would Raul free them? I don't think so." Says Roberto de
Miranda: "There is a concealed happiness among the people,"
but this has less to do with Raul's rise than Fidel's demise.


POLITBURO POWER STRUGGLE ALLEGED
--------------


8. (C) Roberto de Miranda told Poloff August 8 that a former
fellow prison inmate named Roberto Rodriguez Acevedo, a
former Interior Ministry official jailed for political
crimes, stopped by for a recent visit. Rodriguez said two
Raul loyalists -- Generals Abelardo Colome Ibarra and
Leopoldo Cintra Frias - were engaged in a serious Politburo
power struggle with National Assembly President Ricardo
Alarcon, a civilian. We have heard this elsewhere, from
military analysts and from retired Gen. Quevedo Perez, who
made the assertion to a TV reporter in Miami, where he
defected in 2003.
PARMLY