Last Updated: Friday, 19 May 2023, 07:24 GMT

Cuba: Media Repression Mars Obama Visit

Publisher Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Publication Date 25 March 2016
Cite as Institute for War and Peace Reporting, Cuba: Media Repression Mars Obama Visit, 25 March 2016, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/57061e1e4.html [accessed 19 May 2023]
DisclaimerThis is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States.

Activists say that the Cuban government unleashed a concerted campaign of intimidation against independent journalists in the run-up to US President Barack Obama's March 20-22 visit.

The Association for Freedom of the Press (APLP), a body tolerated by the Cuban government although it has no legal status, reported that since March 16 numerous journalists had been harassed, threatened and detained.

Two journalists from Hablemos Press Information Centre - Lewis Miguel Guerra Tamayo and photojournalist Yaser Fernando Rodríguez - were arrested by plain-clothed policemen near the Ernest Hemingway Museum.

On March 19, other journalists from the same news agency were detained at the José Martí International Airport when returning to Cuba. Officials tried to take away their recording equipment.

Local reporters for Cubanet News, a website based in Miami, were not allowed to leave their homes to cover the president's visit.

Elsewhere, a state security officer told another journalist, Augusto César San Martin, that he did not want to see him "with a camera for the next few days".

Another reporter, Lázaro Yuri Valle Roca was beaten and arrested on March 20 and only located several days later when his wife learned that he was being held at the police station in Santiago de Las Vegas.

In Isla de la Juventud province, independent journalists were summoned to police stations without explanation, a practice denounced by the APLP as a way for the government to intimidate journalists and activists.

On March 18, the APLP published a report on the state of freedom of expression since the US-Cuba détente agreed in December 2014.

It documented 54 attacks against journalists, including physical and psychological violence, as well as incidences of arbitrary arrest.

Copyright notice: © Institute for War & Peace Reporting

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