Miguel Amado Reyes Fonseca
Independent journalists scare the hell out of the Castro dictatorship.
What else can explain the move by State Security on Aug. 20 to block Miguel Amado Reyes Fonseca from attending a free journalism class offered by the U.S. Interest Section in Havana?
Police officers played Reyes under house arrest, which, I guess, is better than what happened to Reyes when the goons came calling on July 9. That day, they drove Reyes to a police station and beat him, again for going to the U.S. Interest Section to learn some of the nuts and bolts to being a journalist.
Independent journalists are on the front lines of the struggle for liberty in Cuba, both for how they exercise their God-given right to free expression and for how they shine the light on the reality of Cuba today.
For both reasons, the Castro dictatorship has reason to be very afraid.
What else can explain the move by State Security on Aug. 20 to block Miguel Amado Reyes Fonseca from attending a free journalism class offered by the U.S. Interest Section in Havana?
Police officers played Reyes under house arrest, which, I guess, is better than what happened to Reyes when the goons came calling on July 9. That day, they drove Reyes to a police station and beat him, again for going to the U.S. Interest Section to learn some of the nuts and bolts to being a journalist.
Independent journalists are on the front lines of the struggle for liberty in Cuba, both for how they exercise their God-given right to free expression and for how they shine the light on the reality of Cuba today.
For both reasons, the Castro dictatorship has reason to be very afraid.
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