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U.N. Ruling Exposes Cuba As World Leader In Political Arbitrary Jailing
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) For years, Cuba has sold an image of a poor but dignified country under siege, with critics dismissed as liars or agents of foreign powers. Now a UN body has, in effect, torn that narrative apart.
The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has ruled that 49 Cubans jailed after the huge protests of 11 July 2021 are being held illegally.
Those marches, sparked by shortages, power cuts and anger over the lack of freedoms, brought thousands of ordinary people into the streets across the island. Many had never protested before.
According to the UN experts, what happened next followed a clear pattern. People were seized without proper arrest warrants, not told clearly why they were being detained, and not brought quickly before a judge.
Some disappeared for days or weeks, with families left in the dark. Others faced trials behind closed doors, with little or no access to real lawyers, and long prison sentences based on vague offences like“public disorder” or“contempt.”
These 49 people are part of a much larger group. Human rights monitors say Cuba has more than 1,000 political prisoners, and the UN has already issued opinions covering 93 Cuban detainees since 2019.
UN demands release and investigations
That makes Cuba, on paper, the country with the most confirmed arbitrary detentions in the world over that period. It is also one of the few places where the UN has had to issue“mass opinions” about whole groups of prisoners at once.
Havana was invited to answer the allegations and simply did not respond in time. Even so, the UN went ahead and demanded the release and compensation of the 49 prisoners and called for independent investigations into who ordered the abuses.
For expats, investors and foreign governments, the message is blunt: behind the tourist postcards and ideological slogans, Cuba runs a system where stepping into the street with a sign can land you in prison for years.
The UN has now stamped that reality with its seal, and it will be harder for the rest of the world to pretend it has not seen it.
The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has ruled that 49 Cubans jailed after the huge protests of 11 July 2021 are being held illegally.
Those marches, sparked by shortages, power cuts and anger over the lack of freedoms, brought thousands of ordinary people into the streets across the island. Many had never protested before.
According to the UN experts, what happened next followed a clear pattern. People were seized without proper arrest warrants, not told clearly why they were being detained, and not brought quickly before a judge.
Some disappeared for days or weeks, with families left in the dark. Others faced trials behind closed doors, with little or no access to real lawyers, and long prison sentences based on vague offences like“public disorder” or“contempt.”
These 49 people are part of a much larger group. Human rights monitors say Cuba has more than 1,000 political prisoners, and the UN has already issued opinions covering 93 Cuban detainees since 2019.
UN demands release and investigations
That makes Cuba, on paper, the country with the most confirmed arbitrary detentions in the world over that period. It is also one of the few places where the UN has had to issue“mass opinions” about whole groups of prisoners at once.
Havana was invited to answer the allegations and simply did not respond in time. Even so, the UN went ahead and demanded the release and compensation of the 49 prisoners and called for independent investigations into who ordered the abuses.
For expats, investors and foreign governments, the message is blunt: behind the tourist postcards and ideological slogans, Cuba runs a system where stepping into the street with a sign can land you in prison for years.
The UN has now stamped that reality with its seal, and it will be harder for the rest of the world to pretend it has not seen it.
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