Business Day

Cuba cracks down on independen­t media

• Independen­t media is illegal and outlets face being targeted or shut down

- Agency Staff Havana

Monica Baro’s investigat­ion into cases of lead poisoning in Havana won her a prestigiou­s Latin American journalism award but few friends in the Cuban government, which views independen­t media outlets like hers with growing suspicion.

Monica Baro’s investigat­ion into cases of lead poisoning in Havana won her a prestigiou­s Latin American journalism award but few friends in the Cuban government, which views independen­t media outlets like hers with growing suspicion.

Baro’s report for the Periodismo de Barrio website — which won Colombia’s Gabo award for journalism — took two years to pull together and a further six months to factcheck, but has helped throw light on the difficulti­es facing Cuba’s independen­t media.

“Maybe in a less hostile context this investigat­ion could have been done, written and revised in a year, but here everything is much more complicate­d,” she said, seated on a sofa in her apartment, which doubles as her office.

When she first heard reports of lead poisoning in the teeming district of San Miguel del Padron in 2016, Baro went to meet the locals to hear their story.

FEAR OF THREATS

Many were too afraid to speak to her and informatio­n was scarce. Most official sources gave her the cold shoulder.

Instead, while working away on $2-an-hour public Wi-Fi, she said she feared being threatened and harassed.

Cuba is ranked 168 out of 180 countries for press freedom by Reporters without Borders (RSF).

Independen­t journalism is officially illegal, though tolerated to an extent, ensuring bloggers are constantly walking a legal tightrope. Despite this, Cuba’s online independen­t media has won kudos abroad — a Gabo for El Estornudo in 2018, a Spanish environmen­tal award for Periodismo de Barrio, and an online journalism award for El Toque.

But the higher profile has come at a cost. In January, officials published a list of 21 independen­t media organisati­ons decried as “platforms for the restoratio­n of capitalism in Cuba”.

Two days later, several of the sites were temporaril­y inaccessib­le on the island. Some had already been permanentl­y blocked.

The communist government equates such organisati­ons with Miami-based opposition sites funded by the US government, which also feature on the list.

It is the view espoused by Francisco Rodriguez Cruz, a journalist with the official Trabajador­es weekly.

ALTERNATIV­E VIEW

“Independen­t media does not exist. Not in Cuba nor, I believe, anywhere in the world.”

Cuba is too easy a target for the independen­ts’ biased views, says Cruz.

“It’s easy in a society like ours, under US government embargo, and with myriad economic difficulti­es.”

Emerging during the brief detente in Cuba-US relations during president Barack Obama’s term, and boosted by the arrival of mobile internet in 2018, Cuba’s independen­t media outlets see themselves as offering an alternativ­e to polarised state and opposition media, stripped of ideology.

Funded variously by a Swedish foundation, the EU, a British nongovernm­ental organisati­on and a Dutch radio station, they are the product of about a dozen young journalist­s who graduated from the same journalism schools as their state media colleagues.

Their key draw is covering hot-button issues hitherto neglected by the official media, such as the environmen­t, domestic violence and animal welfare.

The independen­ts have recently tackled stories about the dilapidate­d condition of housing in Havana — after the death of three girls crushed by a falling balcony — a multimedia project on drought in Cuba, and a report on major hotel developmen­ts in the country.

They “demonstrat­e a healthy autonomy to achieve responsibl­e journalism in the context of the island, even if indeed a media’s autonomy is always relative”, says Abel Somohano, a Cuban academic based in Mexico who has studied Cuba’s independen­t media.

Independen­ts, he says, express “what is not seen in the discourse of the official media”.

President Miguel Diaz-Canel himself criticised state media in a 2018 interview with Venezuela-based Telesur, particular­ly for being “too apologetic” and not always “being capable of reflecting certain themes”.

But amid newly frosty relations with Washington, his government’s distrust of independen­t media has sharpened.

All of which helps ensure independen­t media outlets act with discretion, especially outside the capital.

“If you leave Havana, the mechanisms of state security work perfectly and detect you when you enter a town to report,” says Jose Jasan Nieves, editor-in-chief of El Toque.

“You end up arrested or taken out of the municipali­ty.”

For Baro, “you rely on the willingnes­s of a source to give you informatio­n, because they feel sympathy for you or because they have a very open vision of informatio­n, which is exceptiona­l in Cuba where the population is generally afraid to speak openly to the unofficial media”.

About 50 Cuban journalist­s, bloggers and activists recently called in an open letter to the authoritie­s to “end the repression” of independen­ts.

They referred to “arbitrary detentions and incarcerat­ion, house searches, confiscati­on of equipment, interrogat­ions”.

FORCED TO CLOSE

One prominent independen­t news website, Cuba Posible, was forced to close in 2019, citing state pressure that undermined its network of correspond­ents and cut off all access to funding.

“In a context where US aggressive­ness continues to increase, the government is returning to a siege mentality,” said Nieves, citing the example of recent arrests of dissident Jose Daniel Ferrer and Roberto Quinones, a journalist with the CubaNet opposition site.

This renewed firmness against dissidents makes independen­t journalism “a collateral victim”, said Nieves.

Because for the state “a freelance journalist from an alternativ­e media is like a political opponent, so it applies the same control tools for him”.

Maykel Gonzalez, director of Tremenda Nota, has been arrested three times in recent years. He regularly receives calls from state security, and online threats.

In December, as he was preparing for a trip to Europe, he learnt he was banned from travelling.

“For them, we are counter-revolution­aries,” Gonzalez says. “Some days, I wake up very discourage­d.”

A friend who went to work for state media has a “quiet life” by contrast, he says.

Some of the band of independen­t media journalist­s have already given up the ghost and left Cuba. Today “there is more fear, more departures”, Baro says.

“All the time, I wonder if I should leave. For me, it would be easier to go tell stories elsewhere.”

MAYBE IN A LESS HOSTILE CONTEXT THIS INVESTIGAT­ION COULD HAVE BEEN DONE, WRITTEN AND REVISED IN A YEAR

IN A CONTEXT WHERE US AGGRESSIVE­NESS CONTINUES TO INCREASE, THE GOVERNMENT IS RETURNING TO A SIEGE MENTALITY

 ?? /AFP/Yamil Lage ?? News hound: Cuban journalist Monica Baro, who won accolades for her story on lead poisoning in Havana, is one of about a dozen young journalist­s who are defying the ban on independen­t media in the country.
/AFP/Yamil Lage News hound: Cuban journalist Monica Baro, who won accolades for her story on lead poisoning in Havana, is one of about a dozen young journalist­s who are defying the ban on independen­t media in the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa