Cuban-American groups in South Florida and journalism watchdog organizations are seeking the release of 22 Cuban political prisoners, including an independent journalist who apparently sewed his lips shut to protest his treatment.
The wife of a fellow prisoner told other Cuban activists and the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists that Juan Carlos Herrera Acosta, 42, sewed his own lips together in mid-July while in prison in Cuba’s eastern Holguin Province.
Herrera sewed his lips as part of a hunger strike to protest prison conditions, said Carlos Lauria, who coordinates the Committee’s Americas program. He said Herrera and other political prisoners face inadequate health-care, rotten food and occasional beatings. They are also often housed with hardened criminals, Lauria said.
The hunger strike ended around July 30, when Herrera was taken to a prison hospital.
Cuban press officials in Havana did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday. The communist government typically does not comment on the protests of political prisoners and regularly characterizes them as mercenaries and counterrevolutionaries.
Herrera is among 22 government opponents held since a 2003 crackdown, when 75 dissident and independent journalists were arrested.
He was convicted under Law 88, a broad measure that makes it a crime to disseminate any information or disturb public order with the aim of furthering the US embargo against the island. He is serving a 20-year sentence.
“We talked to Melba Santana, the wife of fellow prisoner Alfredo Dominguez Batista. She visited the prison, and she was unable to see Herrera, but apparently the journalist [Herrera] was able to smuggle her a note, telling his condition,” Lauria said.
The Miami-based Cuban Democratic Directory, which works to raise awareness about Cuban political prisoners internationally and receives US funding, made public this week a brief telephone exchange between Herrera and Cuban human rights activist Juan Carlos Gonzalez Leiva.
In it, Herrera, speaking very quickly, says the stitches were forcibly removed and threatens to renew his hunger strike and sew his lips together again “no matter the cost.”
SUPPORT: Elon Musk’s backing for the far-right AfD is also an implicit rebuke of center-right Christian Democratic Union leader Friedrich Merz, who is leading polls German Chancellor Olaf Scholz took a swipe at Elon Musk over his political judgement, escalating a spat between the German government and the world’s richest person. Scholz, speaking to reporters in Berlin on Friday, was asked about a post Musk made on his X platform earlier the same day asserting that only the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party “can save Germany.” “We have freedom of speech, and that also applies to multi-billionaires,” Scholz said alongside Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal. “But freedom of speech also means that you can say things that are not right and do not contain
FREEDOM NO MORE: Today, protests in Macau are just a memory after Beijing launched measures over the past few years that chilled free speech A decade ago, the elegant cobblestone streets of Macau’s Tap Seac Square were jam-packed with people clamouring for change and government accountability — the high-water mark for the former Portuguese colony’s political awakening. Now as Macau prepares to mark the 25th anniversary of its handover to China tomorrow, the territory’s democracy movement is all but over and the protests of 2014 no more than a memory. “Macau’s civil society is relatively docile and obedient, that’s the truth,” said Au Kam-san (歐錦新), 67, a schoolteacher who became one of Macau’s longest-serving pro-democracy legislators. “But if that were totally true, we wouldn’t
Two US Navy pilots were shot down yesterday over the Red Sea in an apparent “friendly fire” incident, the US military said, marking the most serious incident to threaten troops in over a year of US targeting Yemen’s Houthi rebels. Both pilots were recovered alive after ejecting from their stricken aircraft, with one sustaining minor injuries. However, the shootdown underlines just how dangerous the Red Sea corridor has become over the ongoing attacks on shipping by the Iranian-backed Houthis despite US and European military coalitions patrolling the area. The US military had conducted airstrikes targeting Yemen’s Houthi rebels at the
MILITANTS TARGETED: The US said its forces had killed an IS leader in Deir Ezzor, as it increased its activities in the region following al-Assad’s overthrow Washington is scrapping a long-standing reward for the arrest of Syria’s new leader, a senior US diplomat said on Friday following “positive messages” from a first meeting that included a promise to fight terrorism. Barbara Leaf, Washington’s top diplomat for the Middle East, made the comments after her meeting with Ahmed al-Sharaa in Damascus — the first formal mission to Syria’s capital by US diplomats since the early days of Syria’s civil war. The lightning offensive that toppled former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad on Dec. 8 was led by the Muslim Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which is rooted in al-Qaeda’s