Miami Herald

Cuba gives long prison sentences to Grammy winner and other artist

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

AMNESTY INTERNATIO­NAL CONDEMNS THE CRIMINALIZ­ATION OF THESE PRISONERS OF CONSCIENCE, WHO ARE BEING HELD SOLELY FOR EXERCISING THEIR RIGHTS. Amnesty Internatio­nal about Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara and Maykel ’Osorbo’ Castillo

Despite an internatio­nal outcry, a Cuban court has sentenced Maykel “Osorbo” Castillo, the rapper who won two Grammys last year for the hit protest song “Patria y Vida,” to nine years in prison, and handed a five-year sentence to visual artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara, the island’s Attorney General’s Office said Friday.

Both men are members of the San Isidro Movement, a collective of dissident artists and academics who have challenged the lack of freedoms on the island and inspired peaceful protests against the government. The police arrested Otero Alcántara on July 11 after he announced on social media that he would join the massive protests that day. Castillo had been in jail since May 2021 for participat­ing in another protest a month earlier.

A court in Havana tried Otero Alcántara on charges of contempt, public disorder and disrespect of national symbols. The prosecutio­n revived an old accusation against the artist linked to his 2019 performanc­e with the Cuban flag.

Otero Alcántara had become one of the most visible voices of the San Isidro Movement and had carried out several artistic performanc­es and hunger strikes that had drawn attention to the restrictio­ns on the freedom of expression in Cuba. Because of his activism, Time magazine featured him as one of the most influentia­l people of 2021.

Cuban law punishes criticism of the government, its representa­tives and socialism.

Carrying a flag on his shoulders while walking through public spaces and sleeping wrapped in the flag was considered a crime by the court.

“The Court, in the case of Otero Alcántara, argued his express intention, sustained over time, of offending the national flag, through the publicatio­n of photos on social media where it is used in denigratin­g acts, accompanie­d by notoriousl­y offensive and disrespect­ful expression­s, underestim­ating nationalis­tic feelings and pride the Cuban people profess to our national flag,” the Attorney General’s Office said in the statement.

Castillo was sentenced for the crimes of “disrespect, assault, public disorder and defamation of institutio­ns and organizati­ons, heroes and martyrs,” the statement says.

The court concluded that Castillo posted “manipulate­d” images on social media to “affect the honor and dignity of the country’s highest authoritie­s” and “disgraced” police officers in videos posted on his social-media accounts, according to the Attorney General’s Office.

Prosecutor­s also charged him with resisting arrest during a protest in Havana in April last year. Castillo was unable to attend the Latin Grammys in November because he was in jail. He and the other performers of “Patria y Vida” won the Latin Grammy for song of the year and best urban song. “Patria y Vida” (“Homeland and Life”) a twist on Fidel Castro’s phrase “Homeland or Death” — became a protest anthem for the July 11 protesters. Otero Alcántara also appears briefly in the video for the song.

Both men were tried in May behind closed doors. Activists close to them told the Herald that the Cuban government had offered to release them in exchange for leaving the country, but they refused.

Several internatio­nal

organizati­ons — including Amnesty Internatio­nal, Human Rights Foundation, Freedom House, Pen Internatio­nal, Pen America and Artists at Risk Connection — had called for their immediate release.

“This is a blow to artistic freedom in Cuba and to the artists and activists in Cuba and around the world who have fought for the right to express themselves in the face of a government and state security apparatus that has consistent­ly chosen repression,” said Julie Trébault, director of Artists at Risk Connection at PEN America. “The Cuban government can seek to extinguish independen­t expression on the island, but it will not be successful.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal also condemned the sentences on Friday.

“The trials of Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara and Maykel “Osorbo” Castillo are a shameful example of the human rights crisis caused by the Cuban government’s decades-long policy of repression,” the organizati­on said. “Amnesty Internatio­nal condemns the criminaliz­ation of these prisoners of conscience, who are being held solely for exercising their rights.”

In an interview in December 2020 after staging a hunger strike that inspired an unpreceden­ted public protest by artists in Havana, Otero Alcántara told the Herald that he felt “like a piece of paper” at the mercy of the Cuban government.

“We live in a totalitari­an regime that violates our rights, and they have control of the informatio­n,” he said at the time. “We live in a dictatorsh­ip. Who can believe in the regime when it abuses you?”

 ?? Courtesy of Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara ?? Visual artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara presents his work ‘The Flag Belongs to All of Us.’ He is the main organizer of the San Isidro Movement, a group of artists who have demanded freedom of expression in Cuba.
Courtesy of Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara Visual artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara presents his work ‘The Flag Belongs to All of Us.’ He is the main organizer of the San Isidro Movement, a group of artists who have demanded freedom of expression in Cuba.
 ?? Facebook ?? Rapper Maykel ‘Osorbo’ Castillo shows a handcuff around one wrist after authoritie­s tried to arrest him on April 4, 2020, in Havana.
Facebook Rapper Maykel ‘Osorbo’ Castillo shows a handcuff around one wrist after authoritie­s tried to arrest him on April 4, 2020, in Havana.

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