Tuesday, March 18, 2014

March 18: A day of historic significance in Cuba

"Eleven years since the Cuban Spring and the witch hunt by state security against the heroes of the Varela Project." - Rosa Maria Payá Acevedo, March 18, 2014

"Cuba also marks 11 years of the 2003 Black Spring. My thoughts today are with those who paid the ultimate price: their lives." - Iván Hernández Carrillo, March 18, 2014


As Venezuelan democrats observe the one month mark of the imprisonment of Leopoldo Lopez and denounce the murder of students such as Anthony Rojas, their Cuban counterparts are also observing today March 18, an important date for a number of reasons.


Democrats the world over should also take into account the importance of  March 18 inside of Cuba. It was 11 years ago today that 100 activists were arbitrarily detained and sentenced up to 28 years in prison for their nonviolent dissent. Many of them were Project Varela activists. The crackdown became known as the Black Cuban Spring.

Imprisoned arbitrarily since March 18, 2012
 At the same time, today marks two years that Sonia Garro Alfonso and her husband Ramón Alejandro Muñoz have been arbitrarily detained in Cuba. They are political prisoners. In Cuba nonviolent dissent is punishable by up to 28 years in prison as was demonstrated in the Cuban Black Spring. Amnesty International recognized the individuals rounded up in March of 2003 as prisoners of conscience. What saved this activists from serving out their sentence was the emergence of the Ladies in White, Cuban women who took to the streets in protest demanding their loved ones freedom.

If the people of Venezuela fail to restore their civil liberties and fundamental freedoms this is what they have to look forward to.


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