
Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez in her house in Havana, Nov. 9, 2009. Well-known Cuban blogger and government critic Sanchez said she and two fellow bloggers were detained briefly on Friday by security agents and accused of being "counter-revolutionaries." (Enrique De La Osa/Reuters)
Yoani Sanchez vs. the state
How will Cuba deal with a 34-year-old blogger with spotty internet and a massive global following?
HAVANA, Cuba — In the past two years, Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez has become a potent symbol of opposition to the Castro government, a young woman who sketches out a grim chronicle of life on the communist-run island, calling for greater freedom.
Her blog, Generation Y, claims more than a million visitors per month, and her postings routinely elicit thousands of reader comments. The blog is translated into 15 languages, appearing in English on The Huffington Post website, and Sanchez has won several major awards for her work in the U.S. and Europe. Last year Time named her one of the world’s 100 most influential people.
Now, after a weekend incident in which she said was forced into a car and roughed up by Cuban security agents, Sanchez may emerge as a central figure in the island’s tentative diplomatic thaw with the United States. As Sanchez’s activism increasingly moves from the computer screen to the street, she appears on a collision course with Cuban authorities. If she is arrested or placed on trial for her activities, the Obama administration’s cautious diplomatic overtures toward Cuba could grind to a halt.
To that exent, the next phase of the Cold War-era feud between the U.S. and Cuba may hinge on a distinctly 21st century phenomenon: a 34-year-old blogger with a computer, spotty internet access and a massive global following. Opponents of Cuba policy reform in Washington have already seized on her charges of assault, claiming the Obama administration’s recent attempts to improve relations have failed to bring more tolerance for dissent on the island.
Sanchez couldn’t be reached for comment, but she told the BBC this week that she would not be intimidated or silenced. “The only thing these attacks do is generate more Google hits for my name, and increase the solidarity of the international blogging community,” she said.
Cuba's blogger movement is small but growing, and the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists estimates the island has 100 unapproved blogs, including some written by dissidents, activists, and others government critics. Sanchez's Generation Y is by far the most famous, offering two or three short postings each week in a carefully-crafted, literary style. Her descriptive writing is invariably critical of the island's socialist system, but often uses language that isn't explicitly political, unlike previous generations of dissident writers.
To the Cuban government and its supporters, Sanchez and her blog are a sophisticated but insidious tool in a long propaganda war waged by anti-Castro forces abroad. Despite her international popularity, Sanchez remains virtually unknown among ordinary Cubans, since few have regular internet access and her site is blocked by state-controlled servers. At times Sanchez dictates her blog entries over the phone to supporters abroad, who post them on servers off the island.
The government has not commented on the assault allegations, but according to Sanchez, she and her friends were stopped en route to an anti-violence march last Friday by a group of men she said were plainclothes officers. The men ordered Sanchez into a car, and when she refused they forced her into the backseat, striking her back, legs and buttocks. Sanchez said the men called her a “counterrevolutionary” and warned her she had crossed the line with her activities. She said she was let go after 25 minutes.
Sanchez was not seriously injured in the incident, but said she had a sore back and has been using a crutch to move around. She has continued writing her blog, pushing back this week at critics who she likened to those who would blame a rape victim for wearing a short skirt or walking provocatively. “In the face of these attitudes, the victim feels doubly assaulted,” she wrote.
Sounds like Cuba has it's own version of the CIA and KGB running things. It's existence, like those of the CIA and KGB, are proof of a couple of things. The government of Cuba isn't interested in right or wrong or benefit of the people of Cuba, only in maintaining their own positions of power. And the employment of those types of tactics is proof of their own institutional, and personal, cowardice. What's both hilarious and tragic is that it took a group of agents to try, unsuccessfully, to intimidate one woman. Talk about a group of ineffectual, cojoneless eunuchs!
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