Bangkok Post

MPs pass penal code decried by rights group

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HAVANA: Cuban lawmakers on Sunday approved a new penal code for the country that is being critiqued by some rights groups who say its clause on foreign funding may be used to unjustly stifle dissent and independen­t journalism in the wake of widespread antigovern­ment protests last July.

The government said the new code, which replaces a more than 30-year old penal law drafted under former Cuban leader Fidel Castro, is in line with the country’s new constituti­on approved by referendum in 2019, as well as internatio­nal treaties.

The president of Cuba’s Popular Supreme Court, Ruben Remigio Ferro, said the code was compatible “with internatio­nal legal instrument­s on criminal matters, always respecting human rights,” according to a report in state-run newspaper Granma.

The legislatio­n, which is all-encompassi­ng, stiffens penalties for crimes and violence against women, discrimina­tion, and environmen­tal infraction­s.

But some internatio­nal media groups have warned that one key amendment could have a chilling effect on journalist­s.

The code creates new crimes, categorise­d as “other acts against the security of the State”, aimed at confrontin­g “the financing of counterrev­olutionary, subversive or any other illegal activity...on behalf of a government, internatio­nal organisati­ons, non-government­al or others.”

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalist­s said that clause would have a “catastroph­ic effect” on independen­t journalism in Cuba, by making foreign funding illegal.

The Cuban government has alleged that protests last July, widely considered to be the largest since Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution, were financed and fomented by the United States — a crime that could now face stiffer penalties.

The United States has denied involvemen­t in the July 11 protests.

The law also sets the age of criminal responsibi­lity at 16, though for those under 18 it limits jail time to “serious crimes due to their social or economic connotatio­n, or that threaten the security of the State”.

The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, in a statement on May 12, noted allegation­s that Cuba had jailed children under 16 following the July 11 protests.

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