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No end to repression after Castro, activist says

HAVANA
Wed Feb 20, 2008 7:42pm EST
Members of the ''Mothers and Women Against Repression'' movement hold banners showing Cuban political prisoners during their protest at the Ibero-American Summit in the historical Spanish town of Salamanca October 15, 2005. International human rights groups hope Fidel Castro's retirement will lead to the release of political prisoners, but a skeptical local activist said he sees no end to repression of dissent. REUTERS/Miguel Vidal

HAVANA (Reuters) - International human rights groups hope Fidel Castro's retirement will lead to the release of political prisoners, but a skeptical local activist said he sees no end to repression of dissent.

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"The gulag is intact and continues to swallow up Cubans. Few are being freed," veteran rights activist Elizardo Sanchez said on Wednesday.

His illegal but tolerated Cuban Commission for Human Rights estimates there are 230 people in prison in Cuba for expressing their political views, serving sentences of up to 28 years.

Amnesty International has adopted 58 of them as what it calls prisoners of conscience, who it says are imprisoned solely for the peaceful expression of beliefs. It urged Cuba's communist government on Tuesday to seize the opportunity provided by Castro's departure to guarantee basic human rights.

Reform must start with the release of all prisoners of conscience, the judicial review of all sentences passed after unfair trials and the abolition of the death penalty, the organization said.

Castro, 81, announced his retirement on Tuesday, saying he was too ill to continue as president. His brother Raul Castro has been acting president since the Cuban leader was sidelined by illness in July 2006. He has not appeared in public since.

Cuba last week freed four dissidents jailed since a March 2003 crackdown on dissent. Their release on health grounds was requested by the Spanish government. Cuba insisted that the four men and their families leave for exile in Spain.

The decline in the number of Cubans behind bars for political reasons, from 283 at the end of 2006, has been seen by foreign governments as a sign of greater leniency under Raul Castro's administration.

Cuba's decision to sign the U.N. International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and a similar pact on economic and social rights by March has also been seen as a step forward.

"REPRESSIVE MACHINERY"

Sanchez, a former Marxist philosophy professor turned dissident, says nothing has changed. He believes Fidel Castro will continue running Cuba as long as he is alive.

The release of political prisoners is the main indicator to gauge movement toward democratic change, he said.

"As long as there are 230 political prisoners in Cuban jails, one cannot say the situation has advanced one millimeter," he said.

Cuba does not allow the International Red Cross access to its prisons. It denies holding any political prisoners and labels dissidents "counter-revolutionary mercenaries" on the payroll of its arch-enemy, the United States.

New York-based Human Rights Watch also called on Cuba on Tuesday to unconditionally release jailed dissidents and decriminalize political dissent.

It said Cuba has restricted nearly all avenues of dissent for almost five decades and deprived its citizens of their right to freedom of expression, privacy, association, movement, and due process of law.

Tactics for enforcing political conformity have included police warnings, surveillance, short-term detentions, house arrests, travel restrictions, criminal prosecutions and politically motivated dismissals from employment, it said.

"Even if Castro no longer calls the shots, the repressive machinery he constructed over almost half a century remains fully intact," said Jose Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch.

"Until that changes, it's unlikely there will be any real progress on human rights in Cuba," he said.

(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

(For special coverage from Reuters on Castro's retirement, see: here)



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