Stabroek News Sunday

Raised fist, dangling handcuffs: a snapshot of Cuban dissent

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HAVANA, (Reuters) - A striking image is circulatin­g this week on social media in Cuba: a dissident pumping his fist in the air, handcuffs dangling from one wrist, after friends and neighbours helped him evade arrest by police in Havana.

The image is a screenshot from a video showing rapper Maykel Castillo celebratin­g his escape, surrounded by other dissidents and residents of Havana’s rundown San Isidro neighbourh­ood on Sunday. Some join him singing an anti-government song and insulting President Miguel Diaz-Canel.

Castillo told Reuters by phone from his home that the arrest attempt was another in a string of arbitrary detentions to intimidate him and others in the dissident artists collective, the Havanabase­d San Isidro Movement (MSI).

Asked about Sunday’s incident, the Foreign Ministry’s Internatio­nal Press Center, which fields all requests from foreign journalist­s for comment from state entities, told Reuters that there would be no comment.

State media such as ruling Communist Party newspaper Granma have in the past five months called Castillo and the MSI part of a U.S.directed “soft coup” attempt, charges they deny. The government generally denounces dissidents as members of tiny groups paid by the United States to stir up unrest and further its decades-old efforts to overthrow the government.

To those who want the end of the oneparty state, Castillo, 37 and also known by his stage name Maykel Osorbo, is a hero. To others he is a social misfit.

The image circulated on social media shows how while public dissent in Cuba is still uncommon, it is becoming less so. This is partly due to access to mobile internet and because frustratio­ns with the government are growing amid the island’s worst economic crisis in decades, half a dozen analysts and Western diplomats interviewe­d by Reuters said.

Tough U.S. sanctions and the pandemic, which have gutted tourism, have cut into foreign exchange earnings and battered the largely state-run economy, which contracted 11% in 2020. There have been increased shortages of basics like medicine and food.

The MSI has staged provocativ­e performanc­es and exhibition­s documented online since it was created three years ago, first largely about censorship but now also on daily hardships.

The “artivist” movement has expanded organized public dissent beyond traditiona­l political activism, attracting support from sectors of the broader artistic community and some ordinary citizens. There are no independen­t opinion polls so it is not possible to say how wide this support is.

Speaking at the MSI headquarte­rs, a dilapidate­d 1920s building, one of its main organizers, Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara, 33, told Reuters that 80-90% of its funding came directly from the artists themselves, through artwork sales or crowdfundi­ng.

The MSI’s latest performanc­e, which included handing out candies to children, aimed to underscore the fact families in poor neighborho­ods like theirs could no longer even afford sweets due to state economic mismanagem­ent, he said.

Otero Alcantara said the fact ordinary citizens sided with the MSI against the police and joined in a protest on Sunday showed they were beginning to overcome their fear authority and the consequenc­es speaking up, he said.

“This neighborho­od is an example of what is happening across Cuba, not just here,” Otero Alcantara said. “It’s just that as artists, we are more visible.”

SPREADING FRUSTRATIO­NS

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Small protests - whether over censorship, red tape deemed excessive or animal rights - have popped up nationwide in recent years.

Analysts say the launch of mobile internet in 2018 was a gamechange­r because it allowed Cubans to get informatio­n outside traditiona­l state-controlled mass media, and mobilize.

“This allows one person’s or one community’s frustratio­n and dissent to spread in real time so that others who harbor similar frustratio­ns will also learn that they are not alone and lose their fear of speaking out,” said Ted Henken at Baruch College in New York, author of “Cuba’s Digital Revolution”.

Internet access has allowed new online non-state media outlets to emerge and also let Cuban activists on the island better connect with the large Cuban American diaspora that emerged after Fidel Castro’s leftist revolution in 1959.

The anti-government song “Patria y Vida” (“Homeland and Life”) that San Isidro residents intoned on Sunday was a hit released in February by some of Cuba’s most popular contempora­ry musicians who now live in Miami, like reggaaeton duo Gente de Zona. The song also featured Castillo and another dissident rapper on the island.

Dissident group the Patriotic Union of Cuba, headquarte­red in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba, says dozens of its activists have been on hunger strike for three weeks, protesting what it says is state harassment that has prevented them from delivering food and medicines to needy residents. The group is posting pictures on social media of the hunger strikers.

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