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US Urged to Keep Up Pressure on Cuba Rights


FILE - Recently released dissidents Haydee Gallardo (L) and Sonia Garro hold the Cuban national flag during a march in Havana, Jan. 11, 2015.
FILE - Recently released dissidents Haydee Gallardo (L) and Sonia Garro hold the Cuban national flag during a march in Havana, Jan. 11, 2015.

As the U.S. and Cuba move ahead with their historic normalization of bilateral ties, human rights groups have been urging Washington to keep up the pressure on Havana to improve its dismal rights record.

When the thaw in relations was announced late last year, Cuba announced several rights-related trust-building measures, including agreeing to release 53 political dissidents, expand Internet access, and allow more visits by rights monitors.

But the communist government continues to hold dozens more political prisoners, tightly restricts freedom of expression, and uses threats and intimidation to discourage government critics, according to activist groups.

Political prisoners

At least 60 political prisoners remain behind bars in Cuba, including at least two dozen held on charges linked to peaceful political protests, according to a report this month by the independent Cuban Commission of Human Rights and National Reconciliation (CCDHRN).

Those figures represent a vast improvement from past decades, when Cuba detained thousands of political prisoners. But activists warned that in some ways the progress was deceptive and reflects only a change in tactics.

For instance, there has been a sharp increase in the number of short-term, arbitrary detentions, according to the CCDHRN. The group received over 7,100 reports of arbitrary detentions in the first part of last year, over twice as many as during the same period in 2013.

"Detention is often used preemptively to prevent individuals from participating in peaceful marches or meetings to discuss politics," according to Human Rights Watch's 2015 report on Cuba.

The New York-based group's report also slammed Cuba for "severely limiting" the right to freedom of expression. "Only a very small fraction of Cubans are able to read independent websites and blogs because of the high cost of, and limited access to, the Internet," the report said.

"Those who publish information considered critical of the government are sometimes subject to smear campaigns, attacks, and arbitrary arrests, as are artists and academics who demand greater freedoms," it continued.

US engagement and reforms

President Barack Obama has argued that increased engagement with Cuba will help give the U.S. more, not less, sway in encouraging the human rights and political reforms. Some rights groups agree with that assessment.

"President Barack Obama’s historic decision to overhaul U.S. policy toward Cuba is a crucial step toward removing a major obstacle to progress on human rights on the island," said a December HRW statement.

"It’s been clear for years that U.S. efforts to promote change in Cuba through bans on trade and travel have been a costly and misguided failure,” said José Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch. "Rather than isolating Cuba, the embargo has isolated the United States, alienating governments that might otherwise speak out about the human rights situation on the island."

The London-based Amnesty International also expressed hope that the move will offer an opportunity to "forge an agenda for human rights."

A Cuban man wearing a T-shirt with the U.S. flag walks along a street in Havana, Jan. 16, 2015.
A Cuban man wearing a T-shirt with the U.S. flag walks along a street in Havana, Jan. 16, 2015.

"If the U.S. embargo on Cuba, and its negative impact on the economic and social rights of Cubans, is lifted as part of efforts to normalize relations between the two countries, it will mean Cuban authorities can no longer use the crippling sanctions as an excuse for lagging behind on its international human rights obligations."

In its latest report on the state of global human rights, the U.S. State Department itself kept up the pressure on Cuba, acknowledging that widespread abuses remain a serious problem.

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