Miami Herald

Fearing protests, Cuba uses new laws to clamp down on dissent and independen­t media

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

Cuba’s National Assembly has approved a new criminal code that maintains the death penalty for several crimes, punishes criticism of government officials with jail time and makes it illegal for independen­t media to receive funds from abroad, the latest step in a relentless government campaign to squash dissent following mass protests last year.

The new legal framework adds several new crime definition­s tackling opposition activities and freedom of expression and associatio­n. The proposal was swiftly approved unanimousl­y in a weekend session where Cuban leader Raúl Castro, who currently holds no official position, was present.

The penal code, which takes effect in three months, “penalizes the most serious violations related to the abusive use of constituti­onal rights, participat­ion in subversive activities and attacks on informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es,” said Cuban Supreme Court President Rubén Remigio Ferro, who oversaw the trials against the protesters who took to the streets on July 11 last year.

Many provisions in the new legal framework “appear to be part of an effort to destroy the few freedoms in Cuba that made possible the recent dissident movements in the country, including the historic 11J protests,” said Juan Pappier, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch’s Americas division.

A total of 23 crimes, most of them related to actions against state security, can now be punished by death by firing squad. An official document explaining the changes says Cuban authoritie­s decided to leave the death sentence for “the most serious crimes” and decided to replace it with life in prison for “common crimes,” such as rape or child abuse.

Virtually any criticism of the government, its top officials — including Ferro — and socialism in social media or news outlets could land Cubans in prison for up to five years under charges of “propaganda against the constituti­onal order.”

Taking note of a similar law that was passed by the authoritar­ian government of Nicaragua and forces independen­t organizati­ons taking funds from abroad to register as “foreign agents,” Cuban authoritie­s went one step further and declared it a crime to accept funding from any foreign person or entity to conduct “activities against the state and its constituti­onal order.”

The penal code even overrides the Cuban Constituti­on, making it a crime punishable by up to 10 years in prison to exercise constituti­onal rights in efforts to change the government or the constituti­on.

The provision closes any legal space for peaceful political change in Cuba. It also appears to be a response to events last November, when a petition made by opposition group Archipiela­go to stage an anti-government demonstrat­ion invoked a constituti­onal article that recognizes the right to peaceful demonstrat­ions.

The new code also keeps or expands several controvers­ial provisions, including prison for people who leave the island “illegally,” for example, in a raft; use vulgar language against the island’s handpicked president, Miguel Díaz-Canel and other top officials; or publish “fake news.”

Despite internatio­nal outcry, the criminal code also keeps the legal age of majority at 16, a provision in the current code that allowed government prosecutor­s to issue prison sentences to several July 11 demonstrat­ors below the age of 18.

The code approved Sunday also ensures that state institutio­ns and government-sponsored political organizati­ons do not face accountabi­lity because one of the articles shields them from legal liability.

Authoritie­s called the new code “modern.” Activists and independen­t journalist­s called it an assault

on civil and political freedoms, “a penal code to muzzle us all,” Cuban journalist Yoani Sánchez wrote.

The Committee to Protect Journalist­s, an independen­t group based in New York, also condemned the new code as a threat to independen­t media in Cuba.

“We are alarmed by the passage of Cuba’s new penal code, which further criminaliz­es the work of independen­t journalist­s on the island by banning foreign funding and puts their existence and sustainabi­lity at dire risk,” said Ana Cristina Núñez, the organizati­on’s Latin American and the Caribbean senior researcher. “With the new penal code, Cuban authoritie­s continue to build an intricate and perverse legal regime of censorship and deal a devastatin­g blow to independen­t journalist­s and outlets.”

On Monday, several Cuban activists and exiles expressed dismay and disappoint­ment at the Biden administra­tion’s announceme­nt of changes in Cuba policy just a day after the new penal code was approved.

Anamely Ramos — who is

a Cuban art curator linked to the dissident artistic San Isidro movement, was recently refused entry into the country and is living in Miami — said the administra­tion rewarded the island’s government with the easing of some sanctions despite the ongoing crackdown.

“New criminal code in Cuba to better repress.

More than 1,000 political prisoners. Minors sentenced to more than 15 years. A father in a sit-in demanding freedom. In the midst of this, the United States decides to bet again for the thaw. Shame!” she said.

 ?? ISMAEL FRANCISCO AP ?? Anti-government demonstrat­ors march in Havana, Cuba, on July 11, 2021. Many were given harsh prison sentences.
ISMAEL FRANCISCO AP Anti-government demonstrat­ors march in Havana, Cuba, on July 11, 2021. Many were given harsh prison sentences.

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