Sunday, October 9, 2011

Leader of Cuban dissident group in intensive care

Posted on Saturday, 10.08.11

Leader of Cuban dissident group in intensive care
By ANDREA RODRIGUEZ
Associated Press

HAVANA -- The founder of a prominent Cuban dissident group, the Ladies
in White, was hospitalized for acute respiratory problems and was in
intensive care Saturday, family members and associates said.

Laura Pollan went to a hospital Friday and was in serious condition the
following day, though stable and showing signs of improvement.

"She is very, very grave," said Bertha Soler, another member of the
group. "They told us she has an acute respiratory deficiency," and the
doctors "think the cause is viral."

Pollan fell ill and was vomiting last weekend, and was seen by doctors
twice this week before going Friday to the hospital, where she was
intubated to help her breathe, Soler said by phone from the medical center.

Pollan's daughter, also named Laura, said her condition was still being
studied but she has begun a treatment with antibiotics.

Doctors told the family to expect that she will remain in intensive care
for at least a week, said dissident Elizardo Sanchez, who was with them
at the hospital.

Pollan also has diabetes.

The 63-year-old formed the Ladies in White in 2003 along with other
wives of 75 activists, social commentators and opposition leaders who
were arrested that year. Pollan's husband, Hector Maseda, was among
those sentenced to 25 years in prison.

For years the Ladies pressed for their release by staging weekly marches
through the streets of the capital, wearing white and holding gladiolas.

On occasion, they have been met by rowdy pro-government crowds who
surround the women, shouting insults and revolutionary slogans. The
government accuses the Ladies in White and other dissidents of being
mercenaries in the service of Washington.

The last of those jailed in the 2003 crackdown have been released over
the past year under a deal brokered by the Roman Catholic Church, and
many went into exile with their families.

However the Ladies have continued to march and even expanded their
activities outside the capital. They said they were refocusing their
demands on the release of about 50 other, lesser-known prisoners. Most
of those were arrested for politically motivated but violent crimes such
as sabotage and hijacking, which disqualifies them from consideration by
Amnesty International as "prisoners of conscience."

"We are going to continue," Pollan told The Associated Press in a recent
interview. "We are fighting for freedom and human rights."

In 2005 the European Union recognized the Ladies in White with its top
human rights distinction, the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought,
angering the Cuban government.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/10/08/2444414/leader-of-cuban-dissident-group.html#storylink=misearch

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