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CUBA
CRACKS DOWN ON DISSIDENTS
The Globe
and Mail
Havana
— Cuba's communist government announced
Tuesday night that it had rounded up several
dozen opponents and confirmed new
restrictions on
U.S.
diplomats amid worsening relations between
the two countries.
An official statement on state television
accused the chief of Washington's diplomatic
mission in Havana, James Cason, of trying
“to foment the internal counterrevolution.”
The statement continued: “No nation, no
matter how powerful, has the right to
organize, finance and serve as a center for
subverting the constitutional order.”
Offices at the U.S. Interests Section were
closed late Tuesday and attempts to reach
American diplomats were unsuccessful. The
U.S. State Department had reported the
travel restrictions on its diplomats in
Havana last week, but the Cuban government
did not confirm the new measures until
Tuesday.
In Washington, a State Department official
said they had not seen the announced
measures but would look into them.
Havana's
actions are just the latest in an
increasingly ugly exchange of words between
the two governments, which have had no
regular diplomatic relations for more than
four decades.
The announcement said several dozen
government opponents had been detained but
did not elaborate or say if any charges
pending.
Veteran human-rights activist Elizardo
Sanchez said by telephone late Tuesday that
he had confirmed the detentions of at least
10 dissidents and was checking on reports of
another 20 or so picked up by state security
agents.
In recent weeks,
Havana
has become increasingly incensed with Mr.
Cason, who last month made a high-profile
visit to a meeting of dissidents and spoke
with international journalists gathered
there.
Since arriving here about six months ago,
Mr. Cason has met with opposition members
around the island and last week allowed a
group of dissident journalists to use his
official residence for a meeting.
Mr. Cason has said he is merely trying to
promote democracy and human rights in the
Caribbean nation.
“The Cuban government is afraid — afraid of
freedom of conscience, afraid of freedom of
expression, afraid of human rights,” Mr.
Cason told journalists during last month's
meeting with the opposition.
Cuban President Fidel Castro responded
shortly thereafter by criticizing Mr.
Cason's public appearance and comments.
“Anyone can see that this is a shameless and
a defiant provocation.”
The U.S. State Department then called Mr.
Castro's criticisms of Mr. Cason
“derogatory.”
The U.S. State Department last week
announced it was restricting the freedom of
travel of Cuban diplomats in the United
States, responding to curbs imposed by
Havana on U.S. officials in Cuba.
American government sources said they
believe the Cuban government made the first
move as a means of cutting back on Mr.
Cason's extensive travels across the island.
Cuban officials have also become
increasingly upset about a new solitary
confinement lockdown on five convicted Cuban
spies serving time in American prisons.
The five were convicted in
Miami
of trying to infiltrate
U.S. military bases and Cuban exile groups
in
Florida.
Their sentences range from 15 years to life.
Cuban authorities have lionized the men as
patriotic heroes and say they were merely
working to prevent Cuban exile groups from
launching terrorist acts against their
homeland.
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