lunes, 10 de febrero de 2014

Street protest in Cuba draws at least 500, sparks clash with police

Posted on Wednesday, 01.22.14



Street protest in Cuba draws at least 500, sparks clash with police

BY JUAN O. TAMAYO

JTAMAYO@ELNUEVOHERALD.COM



At least 500 Cubans staged a rare street protest and clash with police

in the eastern city of Holguin after municipal authorities confiscated

household goods being sold in an open-air market by the island's nascent

private business owners, according to witnesses.



"This has been something immense. In my 31 years, I never saw anything

like this," said Holguin business owner Wilian Zaldivar Perez, who added

that patrons in a restaurant near the protest also threw rocks at the

police during the confrontation Tuesday.



Communist-ruled Cuba has not seen street protests of any significant

size since 1994, when thousands of people rioted in downtown Havana amid

a false rumor that the ferry that takes people across Havana Bay would

take anyone to South Florida.



The protest Tuesday was the result of "the dissatisfaction that has been

accumulating" with the Raúl Castro regime and his halting economic

reforms, said Eduardo Cardet, an Holguin physician and member of the

opposition Christian Liberation Movement.



"It's no longer the opposition protesting. Now, it's the people," Cardet

said in a recorded statement posted on YouTube. Although many Cubans

have argued that protests achieve nothing, he added, the marchers in

Holguin "know that it's worth protesting."



Zaldivar said 50 to 60 of the small business owners known in Cuba as

"self-employed" and anywhere from 500 to 700 supporters marched Tuesday

for more than a half-mile to the offices of the municipal government,

demanding the right to work.



The protest was all the more daring because the offices are next door to

the local headquarters of the feared Interior Ministry, in charge of

domestic security. Its State Security agents are in charge of repressing

all forms of dissent.



Zaldivar and other witnesses said the protest started after uniformed

National Revolutionary Police officers and plainclothes State Security

agents raided Holguin's Central Plaza and confiscated household goods on

sale at several kiosks.



Castro has opened some spaces for the "self-employed" to launch 182

types of small-scale businesses. But authorities have been cracking down

on people who are licensed to sell household goods but obtain them at

state-run shops and sell them at much higher prices in what the

government considers to be illegal profiteering.



Zaldivar said police and municipal inspectors acting in a harsh manner

confiscated the goods at the Central Plaza, revoked the licenses of the

merchants and slapped them with fines of about $30 — a large sum in a

country where the average monthly wage officially stands at about $20.



Once the protest reached the municipal offices, some of the protesters

scuffled with police and plainclothes agents, he told El Nuevo Herald by

phone. Several protesters were arrested and he was detained for three

hours at a nearby police station but then released.



Another dissident, Zuleidy Pérez Velásquez, put the number of protesters

as high as 1,000 and reported "enormous beatings" of the marchers by

police, according to the Spain-based Web site Diario de Cuba.



A video of the Holguin protest showed a long but thin line of people

marching in the same direction, and then a large crowd jammed outside a

building, but the number of participants could not be established.



One dissident reported that places with public Internet access in

Holguin had been put under heavy guard after the confrontation,

apparently to keep word of the unrest from seeping out.



The kiosks had moved to the Central Plaza at the request of government

officials who wanted to move them out of their previous location, in

front of the local Lenin Hospital, according to the Diario de Cuba report.



Police and two truckloads of plainclothes agents returned to the Central

Plaza Wednesday and confiscated more of the household goods, "but today

the police acted more civilized," Zaldivar said in a telephone interview

from Holguin.



"Today, the situation is pretty tense," he added, but there were no

public protests on Wednesday because city residents believe that police

were ready to crack down harshly on any further disturbances.



Source: Street protest in Cuba draws at least 500, sparks clash with

police - Cuba - MiamiHerald.com -

http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/01/22/3886745/street-protest-in-cuba-draws-at.html

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