Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06HAVANA9846
2006-05-08 20:18:00
CONFIDENTIAL
US Interests Section Havana
Cable title:  

ROADTRIP BY CANADIAN POLOFF YIELDS HUMAN RIGHTS

Tags:  PHUM PREL KDEM SOCI CU 
pdf how-to read a cable
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 HAVANA 009846 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE DEPT FOR WHA/CCA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/08/2016
TAGS: PHUM PREL KDEM SOCI CU
SUBJECT: ROADTRIP BY CANADIAN POLOFF YIELDS HUMAN RIGHTS
INSIGHTS


HAVANA 00009846 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 009846

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE DEPT FOR WHA/CCA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/08/2016
TAGS: PHUM PREL KDEM SOCI CU
SUBJECT: ROADTRIP BY CANADIAN POLOFF YIELDS HUMAN RIGHTS
INSIGHTS


HAVANA 00009846 001.2 OF 002


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


1. (C) Summary: Canadian Poloff Ram Kamineni, who covers
human rights, briefed us May 5 on his recent weeklong
road-trip to the cities of Camaguey, Las Tunas, Manicaragua,
Puerto Padre, Santa Clara and Santiago. Kamineni met dozens
of pro-democracy activists and "Ladies in White" (relatives
of political prisoners). He says hunger-striking dissident
Guillermo Farinas is predicting his own death by the end of
July. Santiago was a virtual ghost town, with a heavy police
presence and many nightspots closed, apparently following
drug raids. In Puerto Padre, Kamineni says, the "Ladies in
White" play a central role in the dissident community, while
in Las Tunas, one embattled "Lady" is keeping her kids home
for their own protection. Camaguey felt more open and free
than other Cuban cities, but Kamineni says he "couldn't wait"
to get back to Havana. With few exceptions, USINT officers
are forbidden to travel outside Havana's city limits. End
Summary.


2. (C) Canadian Third Secretary Ram Kamineni shared with us
May 5 his experiences following a week-long road trip to the
cities of Camaguey, Santa Clara, Manicaragua, Puerto Padre,
Las Tunas and Santiago. Kamineni said he justified the trip
by attending a Canadian event in Camaguey at the start of the
week, then drove southeast. In Santa Clara, in the central
province of Villa Clara, Kamineni arrived at the hospital
where Guillermo Farinas, the dissident journalist, has since
January 31 waged a hunger strike for Internet access for all
Cubans. The hospital staff told him they were busy and
suggested he return another day. Kamineni then traveled to
the home of Farinas' mother, who called Farinas and informed
him of the situation. Farinas then prodded the staff to let
Kamineni in. The journalist, looking not so much "emaciated"
as "thin," appeared strong in spirit and conviction, the
Canadian said. Farinas predicted he would not survive past
July, but Kamineni doubted that the dissident was close to

death, adding that "the IV can probably keep him going for a
long time." He called Farinas a "rallying point" for the
dissident community in Villa Clara.

"LADIES IN WHITE" PLAY KEY ROLE
--------------


3. (C) In Puerto Padre, Las Tunas province, Kamineni found
that the "Ladies in White" and their supporters play a
unifying role in the dissident community. He met with a
dozen Ladies and other activists during a visit to the Santa
Ana church. One Lady shed light on the circumstances in
which she was prevented from traveling to Havana in mid-March
to mark the third anniversary of the Black Spring crackdown,
in which 75 peaceful dissidents were jailed. She succeeded
in boarding a bus toward Havana, but en route, the bus was
surrounded by police cars. The Lady then "got her own little
motorcade back to Puerto Padre," Kamineni said. In the city
of Las Tunas, meanwhile, a solitary Lady, Gisela Verdecia
Garcia, is under intense pressure for her activities. The
wife of Reinaldo Labrada, a member of Oswaldo Paya's
Christian Liberation Movement, lives in "a fortress,"
according to Kamineni. He said Verdecia "keeps her kids
hidden at home all the time" because several people have
mentioned her dissident activities and then asked, 'You love
your children, right?"

SANTIAGO A "GHOST TOWN"
--------------


4. (C) Santiago de Cuba, the Canadian said, felt more like a
ghost town than southern Cuba's biggest city. Kamineni was
there on a Friday night and found "police on every street
corner," which he speculated had more to do with crime than
anything else. In the city center, he said, the number of
nightclubs had dropped from 50 or so to around 10. "I heard
that the authorities are cracking down on drugs by closing
any establishment where drugs are found during a raid."

STATUS QUO IN MANICARAGUA
--------------


5. (C) Kamineni also visited the Villa Clara city of
Manicaragua, where he met with around a dozen pro-democracy
activists who reiterated what we had heard about local
transport facilities, restaurants and other venues being
placed off-limits to dissidents. Kamineni said that,
regrettably, he was unable to confirm or refute these
assertions. In Camaguey, he was impressed with the
considerable freedom the city's residents have, he said. "At
night, the whole city center opens up and people seem fairly

HAVANA 00009846 002.2 OF 002


free; there's a good vibe." Nevertheless, he said, "I
couldn't wait to get back to Havana."

COMMENT
--------------


6. (C) These vignettes reinforce our sense that, as run-down
as Havana has become, poverty and crumbling infrastructure
are even worse in the interior. Additionally, the different
strands of the dissident movement that sometimes compete for
attention and leadership in Havana, tend to work more
cooperatively against the regime in the provinces.
PARMLY