(RSF/IFEX) – RSF has voiced deep shock at the public beating which armed pro-government supporters gave Guillermo Fariñas, editor of the independent Cubanacán Press agency, in the central city of Santa Clara on 16 September 2005 after he took part in a protest against the arrest of a dissident. “This extremely violent attack on Fariñas […]
(RSF/IFEX) – RSF has voiced deep shock at the public beating which armed pro-government supporters gave Guillermo Fariñas, editor of the independent Cubanacán Press agency, in the central city of Santa Clara on 16 September 2005 after he took part in a protest against the arrest of a dissident.
“This extremely violent attack on Fariñas shows that Cuban independent journalists are not just under threat from the government, but also from ultra-revolutionaries, who in this case vented their anger on Fariñas as the political police looked on,” the organisation said.
The attack came after Fariñas and some 15 other government opponents demonstrated outside a police station to demand the release of Noelia Pedraza Jiménez, a fellow dissident who had just been arrested. About 100 armed pro-government supporters watched the demonstration.
After announcing to the demonstrators that Pedraza would shortly be released on bail pending trial, Vladimir Méndez Mauad, a captain with the state security department, offered to drive Fariñas home. The journalist, who has to use crutches because of a disability and, until recently, had to use a wheelchair, accepted.
However, as Fariñas left the police station, a police officer warned him that whatever happened to him outside at the hands of the armed pro-government supporters “will be your problem.”
According to Fariñas, some 60 pro-government supporters armed with clubs who were still outside then challenged him, asking him if he had the courage to repeat to them what he had said on Radio Martí (the Miami-based, Cuban exile radio station). Kneeling and with his hands behind his head, Fariñas replied, “Why do you listen to Radio Martí if you are revolutionaries?”
After Fariñas refused to say, “Long live Fidel Castro,” they began to insult him and hit him with their clubs until one of them called a halt to the beating, fearing that they would kill him in public. Political instructors with the ruling Communist Party of Cuba then drove him to a deserted spot 23 km outside the city and dumped him there.
Fariñas told RSF his arms and hands are so swollen from the beating that he can no longer write or use a computer keyboard. He added that he thought he was now at the top of the list of people to be arrested in “the next crackdown.”