Stabroek News

Cuba denies permission for opposition marches

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HAVANA, (Reuters) - Cuba yesterday denied government opponents permission to stage what they said would be a peaceful march for civil liberties in the capital Havana and a few other provinces on grounds it was part of efforts to overthrow the government, according to a letter handed to organizers.

Protests rocked the Communist-run country for two days in July, with the biggest anti-government demonstrat­ions in decades resulting in hundreds of arrests, one death and calls for U.S. interventi­on by some Cuban-Americans.

Government critics, organized by a Facebook group called Archipelag­o, initially planned protests across the country for Nov. 20, but switched the date to Nov. 15 after authoritie­s declared the 20th a “National Defense Day” during which citizens practice preparedne­ss for a U.S. invasion.

The fallback date of the 15th, however, falls on the same day Cuba, an island nation of white sand beaches and coral reefs, plans to reopen to tourism after two years in which the all-important industry was hobbled by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Cuba watchers and many government­s have been closely following this newest challenge to local authoritie­s.

Protests in Cuba have always been forbidden with few exceptions on grounds the United States was behind them, but the country’s new constituti­on, approved three years ago, opened a new space for “legitimate” protest.

“The protesters ... as well as their links with some subversive organizati­ons ... have the open intention of changing the political system in Cuba,” a letter to organizers rejecting permission said.

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