August 18, 2010
During the last few weeks, the Castro regime has increased its control on opposition members, using new measures designed to prevent them from mobilizing in areas away from their home neighborhoods.
“We’re recognized wherever we go now. It’s a systematic persecution,” said former political prisoner Raul Risco, spokesman of the Democratic Alliance of Piñar del Rio. “We’re seeing more watchpoints equipped with computers to identify dissidents.”
Opposition member Guiller Fariñas, winner of the European Union’s 2010 Sakharov Human Rights prize, declared in Miami’s El Nuevo Herald that, in the interior of the country, the police have deployed more united and effective units to take over observation tasks. He added that police pressure and a mounting campaign of violence have been especially pronounced in the eastern provinces, such as Gutantanamo, Holgun, and Santiago de Cuba.
The increased vigilance on roads and highways has coincided with a growing wave of aggression and arrests in towns across Cuba. According to Elizardo Sanchez, spokesman for the banned Cuban Commission of Human Rights and National Reconciliation, in the first six months of 2011 there have been 1,727 arrests, in comparison with 821 for the same period in 2010.






