14 July 2014 Last updated at 11:50 GMT
'Ladies in White' protesters held in Cuba crackdown
"Ladies in White" activists said Cuban police rounded them up during a
regular protest in Havana
Dozens of "Ladies in White" opposition activists say they were detained
during a protest march in Cuba.
The women, who were freed after several hours, were marking the deaths
of 37 people who drowned while fleeing the island 20 years ago.
The government has always denied the group's allegation that the
authorities deliberately sunk a tugboat in 1994.
For 10 years, its members have defied a protest ban on the Communist
island by marching every week, dressed in white.
The "Ladies in White" say they were rounded-up by police on Sunday, as
they tried to divert from their normal protest route in the capital, Havana.
More than 90 of them were bundled into buses off the city's smart 5th
Avenue as they headed towards the seafront, they say.
The women were planning to lay flowers in memory of the adults and
children who died when the tugboat they had hijacked sank as it was
pursued by the Cuban authorities in Caribbean waters.
Dissident groups allege the vessel was rammed and flooded with water
cannon, but the government has always maintained the sinking was an
accident.
The women are routinely detained and their protests broken up, the BBC's
Sarah Rainsford in Havana reports, but these days their march attracts
minimal public interest.
However, the group's members say their protests have produced results,
with all 75 political prisoners they have campaigned for now free.
The Cuban authorities say the "Ladies in White" are in the pay of the
United States and form part of Washington's "decades-old effort to
undermine Cuba's socialist revolution".
Source: BBC News - 'Ladies in White' protesters held in Cuba crackdown -
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-28290793
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