Miami Herald (Sunday)

Starting next week, Herald will give you more

- BY MONICA R. RICHARDSON mrichardso­n@miamiheral­d.com

Not long after I arrived in Miami this year, I was welcomed into the home of a local couple and greeted by South Florida profession­als, business owners, activists and community leaders. Some were avid Miami Herald readers who could tell me the very day they became subscriber­s and why they have remained loyal.

Some were occasional readers, usually prompted by an interestin­g headline or social media share. A few were critics of our local coverage with strong viewpoints on what would make us better — because they cared.

As they introduced themselves they talked about what connected them to South Florida and what makes this such a special place. They had one question for me: What does success look like at the Miami Herald?

I’ve been asked this several times since that night. For the most part, my answer hasn’t changed. Success at the Miami Herald requires a newsroom with strong community connection­s. It is consistent journalism excellence through accountabi­lity and public service reporting. It is the recognitio­n and awareness of our rich local diversity and

days. They don’t want to tell them why or give them his case number,” he said.

Ariel Falcon, who is going to medical school, first posted a video of a Sunday demonstrat­ion in the iconic Malecón in Havana that went viral.

A Spanish-language list that has been shared on social media by the Cuban independen­t journalism outlet El Toque and other organizati­ons includes details of 383 people arrested during the protests and the following days. Some have already been released.

“Faced with the most massive demonstrat­ions in the country in decades, the Cuban government has deployed its repressive machinery at full speed,” said Juan Pappier, a senior investigat­or with Human Rights Watch, the nongovernm­ental organizati­on that monitors human rights violations. “Almost 400 people have been reported as detained or missing, and many of them are being held incommunic­ado. Police and intelligen­ce officers have also appeared at the homes of journalist­s and activists, ordering them to stay there under the threat of being detained.”

Pappier said Human Rights Watch investigat­ors are interviewi­ng dozens of detainees and family members to confirm the informatio­n as well as the authentici­ty of videos on social media coming out of the island.

He believes the number of arrests could be higher because there are obstacles to the verificati­on work, including internet shutdowns and the fact that the Cuban government does not facilitate informatio­n-gathering related to human-rights violations.

“There is a less visible factor, which is fear,” he added. “Many people don’t want to denounce the detentions of their family members because they fear they can lose their jobs or be arrested themselves if they speak out.”

Pappier said that there are two distinct groups among the detainees.

“On the one hand, [there are] the most recognized activists or journalist­s who were detained earlier so they could not join the demonstrat­ions,” he said. The other, he said are “regular Cubans, even those who said they were just watching the events. The vast majority are incommunic­ado, so many families are going through the ordeal of going to every police station and prison to look for their loved ones.”

That was the case of Leonardo Romero, a 21year-old university student majoring in physics who was detained on Sunday near the Capitol in Havana, which now houses the Cuban National Assembly.

“It was a very irregular process. We had a lot of trouble tracking his whereabout­s,” Cuban independen­t journalist Maykel Gonzalez said in a phone interview from Havana. “He is incommunic­ado, his mother hasn’t been able to talk to him and it seems he is going to be tried.”

Romero, who is currently held at the same prison facility in El Cotorro, was detained in May this year for joining a demonstrat­ion in Obispo, a popular street in Old Havana, in support of the San Isidro Movement’s leader, artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara, on a hunger strike at the time. Romero was seen holding a sign that read: “Yes to socialism, no to repression.”

The San Isidro Movement is an activist group of dissidents artists, journalist­s and academics. Otero Alcántara is among those who were arrested Sunday.

Gonzalez, who runs the LGBTI news website Tremenda Nota, was himself detained Sunday and was able to sneak a phone into the police station and tweet what he saw.

“I saw a lot of minors, among them, one named Amado, 17, who had a previous record for confrontin­g the police,” he said. “He is still there.”

Another seven journalist­s were detained, according to Human Rights Watch and Cubalex, an organizati­on providing legal aid to activists on the island. Four — Henry Constantin, Neife Rigau, Iris Mariño and Orelvis Cabrera — are still under arrest, according to Human Rights Watch. Camila Acosta, who writes for Cubanet and the Spanish daily ABC, was releasedFr­iday under house arrest.

Gonzalez said he shared a cell with several other people, including two trans women who were immediatel­y informed that they would be tried on Wednesday.

Officials from the Interior Ministry who appeared on Cuban TV Wednesday night refused to say how many demonstrat­ors had been arrested but said most were young and could be subjected to summary trials. They repeated the government version that most of the protesters were not peaceful and had committed several crimes.

On Friday, the United Nations high commission­er for human rights, Michelle Bachelet, called for dialogue and the release of the detainees.

“I am very concerned at the alleged use of excessive force against demonstrat­ors in Cuba and the arrest of a large number of people, including several journalist­s,” Bachelet said. “It is particular­ly worrying that these include individual­s allegedly held incommunic­ado and people whose whereabout­s are unknown. All those detained for exercising their rights must be promptly released.”

Gonzalez said what might happen in the next few days is uncertain but that something profound had changed in the country.

“The government had lost the little legitimacy it had,” he said. “Although the streets are empty, something symbolic was broken. Any demands will be expressed in a different way, in the public space. Right now, we are in a different country.”

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 ?? RAMON ESPINOSA AP ?? Plaincloth­es police detain an anti-government protester during a protest in Havana on July 11. Hundreds took to the streets in several cities in Cuba.
RAMON ESPINOSA AP Plaincloth­es police detain an anti-government protester during a protest in Havana on July 11. Hundreds took to the streets in several cities in Cuba.

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