Cuba denies targeting dissidents with violence
The Catholic Church issued a statement that decries violence against
defenseless people.
By Juan O. Tamayo
jtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com
The Cuban government has denied it ordered violent repressions of the
dissident Ladies in White, according to a Catholic Church statement
Monday that added that any violence "against defenseless people has no
justification."
The carefully written statement issued by the Havana archdiocese avoided
commenting on whether the violence reported by the women and other
dissidents over several recent weeks was true or not.
It also made no mention of the Ladies in White by name, or their meeting
with church officials in Havana last week to request that Cardinal Jaime
Ortega intercede with the government to halt the violence.
Havana archdiocese spokesman Orlando Marquez issued the statement after
a weekend in which members and supporters of the Ladies in White
reported only some harassment but no violent crackdowns.
"In the past few days journalists have asked for the church's opinion on
incidents in which the wives of some former prisoners . .. had been
mistreated, according to their own declarations," Marquez wrote in a
note emailed to journalists.
"It is not necessary to ask for the church's opinion," he said. "It is
well known, and we have reiterated it various times, that violence of
any kind against defenseless people has no justification."
The Cuban government "has communicated to the church that no national
decision center has given the order to attack these people," Marquez added.
Ladies in White spokeswoman Berta Soler praised Ortega and the church
but said that was a government "big lie" because the violence against
the women has come from government-organized mobs and state security
agents. The mobs are made up of members of pro-government groups such as
the Cuban Federation of Women, and are organized and transported by
known state security agents for the Ministry of Interior.
"Those who are hitting us are the mobs, as well as the state security
agents," Soler said by telephone from her home in Havana.
Marquez's statement also said the church supports only those who share
its search for "the well-being of the Cuban people, the reconciliation
and peace for all, through attitudes and gestures that favor the serene
development that Cuba needs."
"Any other way of looking at Cuba's reality that could affect peaceful
coexistence and break down the nation's well-being cannot find any
support among those of us who have a Christian vision of the world," the
statement added.
Most of the recent crackdowns on the Ladies in White have been reported
in eastern Cuba, where they have been trying to establish their right to
attend Sunday Masses at the Santiago cathedral and stage protest marches
afterward — just as their counterparts in Havana do every Sunday.
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