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              | Date: 2001-06-22 
 
 CU: Zwei Jahre für WWW-Dissidenten -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 q/depesche  01.6.22/1
 
 CU: Zwei Jahre für WWW-Dissidenten
 
 Zwei Jahren Häfen oder Knast für "die Verbreitung falscher
 Informationen" im WWW über das segensreiche Walten des
 Staats - was im Kuba des Jahrs 2001 immer noch möglich ist,
 mag Nostalgie bei den zahllosen Lakaien des Leviathan weltweit
 wecken.
 
 Post/scrypt: Wer sagt denn da schon wieder, dass ein Staat, in
 dem solche Urteile gang & gäbe sind im WWW grundsätzlich
 keine Präsenz verloren hat?
 
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 Cyber dissident sentenced to two years' imprisonment
 
 SOURCE: Reporters sans frontières (RSF), Paris
 
 **Updates IFEX alerts of 24 and 8 May 2001**
 
 (RSF/IFEX) - In a letter to Justice Minister Roberto T. Díaz
 Sotolongo, RSF protested the sentencing of José Orlando
 González Bridón to two years in prison, accused of distributing
 "false information" after publishing an article on a foreign-based
 website. RSF asked for his immediate release and that the
 charges against him be dismissed. "This sentence represents a
 toughening of the repression against dissidents who publish thier
 ideas on the web," said RSF Secretary-General Robert Ménard.
 "The Cuban authorities are no longer satisfied with controlling
 access to the net on the island, they are also repressing the
 distribution of information on sites which the Cuban population
 does not even have access to," added Ménard.
 
 According to information collected by RSF, González Bridón,
 secretary-general of the Cuban Democratic Workers' Confederation
 (Confederación de Trabajadores Democráticos de Cuba, CTDC, an
 illegal entity), was sentenced to two years' imprisonment for
 "distributing false information, seriously endangering Cuba's
 prestige and credibility." His family was informed of the sentence
 on 12 June. The trial took place on 24 May after being postponed
 several times. Only González Bridón's family was allowed to attend
 the trial. Foreign press and opponents were denied access to the
 court by a large police presence. According to those close to the
 trade unionist, seats open to the public in the courtroom were
 occupied by military officers.
 
 In an article published on 5 August 2000 on the Cuba Free Press
 website (cubafreepress.org), based in Florida (U.S.A.), the trade
 unionist called into question the authorities' responsibility in the
 death of National CTDC Coordinator Joanna González Herrera.
 González Bridón also reported this information, which was deemed
 "subversive" by the court, on a Miami-based radio station. He was
 arrested on 15 December and has been imprisoned since that
 date. Aged fifty, he suffers from kidney problems. According to
 family members, he is believed to be very depressed and suffering
 psychological pressures in the Combinado del Este (province of La
 Habana) prison where he is currently being held. The authorities
 have denied his mother-in-law the right to visit him.
 
 In Cuba, small independent press agencies, human rights and civil
 society organisations, not recognized by the government, regularly
 publish articles on websites housed in Miami, sending articles
 transmitted by fax phone.
 
 RSF recalls that journalist Bernardo Arévalo Padrón, director of the
 independent press agency Línea Sur Press, is still imprisoned (see
 IFEX alerts of 12 April, 26 and 12 March and 20 February 2001, 25
 July and 11 April 2000, 10 December, 22 October, 17 June and 29
 January 1999 and 21 September 1998). In November 1997, he was
 convicted and sentenced to six years' imprisonment for insulting
 ("desacato") President Fidel Castro and vice president Carlos
 Lage. He is being held at a forced labour camp in El Diamante, in
 Cienfuegos province (centre of the island). Believing that he was
 not "politically re-educated" yet, the camp authorities denied his
 petition for conditional leave on 1 April. Theoretically, he could have
 had recourse to such an option as of October for having completed
 half his sentence.
 
 In a report titled "The enemies of the Internet" and published by
 RSF in March, the organisation noted:
 
 "In 1996, the Cuban government adopted Law 209 titled 'Access
 from the Republic of Cuba to the global network.' Use of the
 internet, according to this law, should not 'violate the moral
 principles of Cuban society nor the country's laws.' E-mail should
 not 'compromise national security.' On the other hand, on 13
 January 2000, Castro created the Information Technology and
 Communications Ministry and announced that he wanted to
 'transform Cuba into an information society.'"
 
 Castro regularly condemns this "manipulative instrument of
 capitalism, in which the majority of the information is available in
 English." Citizens who wish to have access to the Internet must
 provide a "valid reason". If their petition is granted, a contract of use
 with restrictive clauses is signed. Only the Cuban nomenclature
 has access to the Internet: politicians, high-ranking civil servants,
 intellectuals and journalists who are close to circles of power, as
 well as embassies and foreign companies. Cuban exporting
 communities do not have complete access to the Net and are
 limited to e-mail.
 
 A black market for e-mail addresses has arisen, serving few
 Cubans who have access to a computer. Similar to fax copiers,
 computers must be declared to the government. Cuban Internet
 users suspect that information services intercept their e-mails
 because foreign messages either arrive hours after they have been
 sent or not at all.
 
 All Internet traffic is centralised in a single machine, which carries
 out censorship via filters. Many sites are not available from Cuba.
 The filter is implemented on several levels: the site's URL, the IP
 addess and its contents are all carefully controlled through a list of
 hundreds of keywords. Some young Internet users, however, have
 been able to access the entire Net, prevailing over the obstacles.
 
 Indirectly, the Internet permits independent journalists (a hundred
 or so in the island, harassed and considered
 "counterrevolutionary") to enlarge their audience. Even though they
 do not have access to the Net, Cuban communities in exile
 (particularly in Miami) spread their articles transmitted by
 telephone or by fax
 
 Official newspapers "Granma", "Juventud Rebeld" or
 "Trabajadores", and the national news agency Prensa Latina each
 have a website. The Cuban regime censures the Internet but also
 uses it to spread its propaganda.
 
 For further information, contact Régis Bourgeat at RSF, 5, rue
 Geoffroy Marie, Paris 75009, France, tel: +33 1 44 83 84 84, fax:
 +33 1 45 23 11 51, e-mail: ameriques@rsf.fr Internet:
 http://www.rsf.fr
 
 The information contained in this alert update is the sole
 responsibility of RSF. In citing this material for broadcast or
 publication, please credit RSF.
 
 
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 edited by Harkank
 published on: 2001-06-22
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