Writing at TownHall.com, Italian blogger Stefania Lapenna describes how the Cuban opposition, despite continued repression, has grown in focus and strength as most of the media fixate on Fidel Castro's health and the dictatorial capabilities of his little brother Raúl. As usual when it comes to Cuba, Lapenna writes, the world media is missing the real story unfolding in Cuba.
An excerpt:
The Assembly to Promote the Civil Society is a coalition of 365 political parties, movements and independent libraries. Its leader is the 60-year-old independent economist Martha Beatriz Roque Cabello. The majority of the opposition groups in the island are members of or support the Assembly. Unlike more soft coalitions such as the Oswaldo Paya's Varela Project, which demand reforms to the constitution of the communist regime, the groups belonging to the Assembly look for democratic regime change. They don't believe in the possibility of any democratic change coming from the Cuban rulers.In spite of the new wave of repression started after the Assembly's first national congress held on 20th of May, 2005, the coalition is moving forward with new important projects. One of these is a Civil Disobedience and Non-Cooperation campaign promoted with the coordination of the Miami-based exile groups. Named "Yo No Coopero Con La Dictadura, Yo Si Quiero El Cambio" (I do not cooperate with the dictatorship, I want the change), this unprecedented initiative aims to promote the importance of non-cooperation with the repressive forces and the peaceful struggle for freedom through civil disobedience, methods that were successfully used by the freedom fighters in the former communist regimes of Eastern Europe. Several political prisoners spoke to Radio Martì from their prisons, expressing their endorsement of this campaign and calling on the Cuban people to do the same. The prisoners of conscience supporting the initiative are putting it into action by disobeying orders from the prison guards, even if this leads to consequences, like being continuously beaten or taken to incommunicado (solitary confinement) cells as punishment due to their valiant resistance.
Each of the Assembly's groups agreed to a shared action plan with respect to the campaign: they will be engaging the Cuban population in every town and city. Wherever they meet people, they will distribute informative material explaining what the Assembly is and what its initiatives are about.
So far, it seems that the initial steps are working well. Several dissidents in the island report on the growing refusal by the population to attend the official meetings of the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR), which take place in every neighborhood. These meetings are where brutal methods are planned against peaceful opponents and those who violate the "state's laws" that, in Castro's Cuba, include street vendors and prostitutes.
There is also an increase in popular rejection of the so-called 'acts of repudiation' led by the State Security and the political police, who gather as many thugs as possible in front of the houses of dissidents, specially during or before opposition meetings. During these barbaric acts of harassment, which often start from the early morning and end late in the afternoon, the freedom fighters are insulted, threatened with death, defamed and even beaten up in their own houses, as occurred a few months ago to Martha Beatriz Roque.
Read the whole thing here.
For more on the "Yo No" campaign, visit the Cuban Democratic Directorate. Be sure to read the latest column by the Wall Street Journal's Mary Anastasia O'Grady.
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