Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta People’s Defense. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta People’s Defense. Mostrar todas las entradas

The best worker will have to sleep on the street

Félix Anasio Díaz

On November 2, 2017, citizen Félix Anasio Díaz Pineda, 66, born in the province of Holguín, approached CID to report his complete neglect by the government. Félix told us that his family had left for the United States during the massive migration of the 80’s  and the only person who stayed in Cuba was his mother, Sara Pineda. Days later, relatives they had in the state of Florida informed them that the family had died trying to reach the United States. Upon learning the news, his mother committed suicide by setting fire to herself, and the house also burned. At that moment, the only thing Félix thought was to disappear off the face of the earth, because at the same time he had lost his mother and the house where both lived. He then left Holguín for the province of  Cienfuegos.

During 1980, Félix began working at a sugar cane center called Abel Santamaría, in the province of Cienfuegos. As an outstanding worker, he obtained several distinctions from the Communist Party and other organizations, but he only asked for a house to live in, since he did extra work at labor centers and so they would let him sleep there so he would not have to sleep on the streets.

Best worker in 2002

During the latter years of his life, Félix worked as a guard for the Cienfuegos government offices located at the José Martí Park but he tells us he had to leave that job because they told him he could not sleep in his work center because it was not a lodging. He then went to work for a polyclinic in Pueblo Griffo, where as usual, he lives. In that job Félix will soon reach his| retirement age. 


Félix has spent his life living at work centers, doing an excellent job, and the only thing he asks from the government is a small room to sleep in and that they pay his retirement, because at the end of his life he has nothing, not even a place to live.

By the Defensoría del Pueblo (People’s Defense) in Cienfuegos, Henry Lasso, “El Encuyé”.

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After delivering 500 pounds of my harvest for 20 years, they took my land away

Small Farmers National Association identity card

Santa Clara, November 1, 2017

To: Julio Ramiro Lima Corso, First Secretary of the Villa Clara Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba

From: Marcos Martín Rodríguez

I have acquiesced to address you before I receive a reply to the situation I’m in. Since last September I lodged a complaint before the Santa Clara agriculture delegate with no reply to my letter. I inform you that I have been a victim of the lies and corrupt actions of the Agriculture Ministry officials in this province. This is my case:

Since the year 1980 I have worked the land in the La Teresita Farm, located on the Camajuaní Highway. Then, in 2009, I was given a small plot of land  and I had to then join the CCS El Vaqueritro Cooperativa de Crédito y Servicio (Credit and Services Cooperative). For almost 20 years I have delivered to them around 500 pounds every year, of what I harvested.

Unfortunately, on December 11, 2016, I was run over by an ox, while I was working the land, which logically prevented me from working for a while. I was never visited by any CCS member or representative or any agriculture official. Only an inspector of the Santa Clara Oficina de Tenencia de Tierra (Land Ownership Bureau), whose name I do not know, visited me and he summoned me to appear before the Agriculture delegate’s office.

CID Sara Cuba Delgado and Marcos Martín Rodríguez

Still recovering from my tragedy and unable to walk, I went before this official. He did not care about my situation and simply, without hearing my arguments, they took my land away, under the excuse that I had sold| it for 17,000 pesos and that I use to bet at cock fights. He took my legal documents, taking advantage of my low cultural level. Afterward, I went before Sureda, CCS El Vaqurito President, to ask for an explanation about the abuse, since I almost died and no one came to learn about my condition, knowing it was a labor accident while at work. Besides, I am one of the associates who strictly comply with deliveries and payments to the CCS. He told me that, as President, he never took the land away from me, that the responsibility is of those who came and took away my certification. He also told me that he does not want me to stop working.

I have sought help from everyone, but they all close their doors at me. With no fear or shame I sought help from these people you call “those in human rights” who are the only ones who have listened and guided me on how to claim my rights.

Mr. PCC Secretary, corruption is robbing the people, and the people are realizing that we can claim and defend our rights. I hope that you, as the most important person of the PCC will uphold our rights and enforce the country’s laws.

By Sara Cuba Delgado, CID Delegada Provincial (Provincial Delegate) and Defensora del Pueblo (People’s Defender).

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Sick and with no shoes she works in the fields

Mercedes Pérez Cardoso

Santa Clara, November 1, 2017

Not all in Cuba can enjoy the measly salaries they earn after working for 30 days. Hundreds of Cubans are exposed to hunger and hardship, not only in big cities, there’s also countless cases of farmers who live in subhuman conditions.

Thousands die without having received medical assistance and many are unable to complain because of fear of the tyranny and many times because of the high illiteracy level which abounds in Cuban fields. And it’s not for lack of physicians but because they don’t have an income to allow them to seek medical attention.


Mercedes Pérez Cardoso suffers from hepatic cirrhosis and the only time she went to a doctor was when she was diagnosed. During a visit by Cuba Independiente y Democrática Party activists from Villa Clara to the place where this lady tries to survive, she told us she cannot undergo treatment because she has no money to even travel for a specialist to see her. We were able to see how this sick and barefoot woman works the fields with her old husband.

This is how this humble family cooks

CID members of the Democracia Campesina delegation in Villa Clara guided the lady on how to claim her rights before the government, and explained to her the work done in the province by the Defensores del Pueblo (people’s defenders), who guide citizens who are not cared for by the government.

The complaint will be addressed to the Departamento de Atención a la Población de Partido Comunista de Cuba (Population Service Department of the Communist Party of Cuba) in Santa Clara.

By Sara Cuba Delgado, CID Provincial Delegate in Villa Clara and Defensora del Pueblo (People’s Defender).

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I was at Sierra Maestra with Commanders Camilo Cienfuegos and Huber Matos

Raúl Ponce Suñol

Holguín, October 27, 2017

To: Asociación de Combatientes de la provincia de Holguín (Combatants  Association of the province of Holguín)

From: Raúl Ponce Suñol, resident at calle Miró entre Areas y Libertad, identity card 31110983620

My name is Raúl Ponce Suñol, I am 86 years old and live in the area of San José and Las Flores parks, here in the city of Holguín. I am writing once more, since several years ago I tried to approach the Asociación de Combatientes (Combatants’ Association) and was not accepted. Now I write hoping this letter will be received and fairly analyzed.

When I was young, I headed for Sierra Maestra, where I fought in the Ejército Rebelde (Rebel Army) reaching the rank of captain. There, I accompanied commanders Camilo Cienfuegos and Huber Matos, which to me was an honor and something I do not regret.


But after the victory of the Revolution, precisely in the year 1961, I was stripped of my rank as captain, because I always differed with communism, since just as Commander Huber Matos, I fought for a free Cuba, where democracy would be respected, true democracy, something that did not happen. When the Revolution won in the year 1959, the first thing Fidel Castro did was to impose communism, something many of us rebels who fought at Sierra Maestra did not want.

Although I was more fortunate than commander Huber Matos, who served 20 years in unfair imprisonment for not sharing the Castro’s ruthless ideas of communism, they stripped me of my captain’s rank and the government abandoned me. And although they did not jail me, and according to them I remained free, I always lived as a prisoner in the big jail this island has turned into. They not only reviled me as a fighter and as a person but they took everything from me and my family, including property such as the building which today is called Teatro Eddy Suñol, which belonged to our family.

It was then that I crashed against the raw and very hard reality of  Castro’s communism, a synonym of poverty. A struggle began then against hunger and hardship. All this led me to presently live on the streets where I sleep, eat with the cents some people give me, or whatever I find in the trash.

This government never recognized my fighting and the risks I ran at Sierra Maestra, and left me on the street because of disagreeing with its communism, although I was always clear that I was fighting for a Cuba where democracy and human rights would be respected, something that was never enforced by the Castro government.

Since I was abandoned and thrown on the street, today I approach the true fighters, members of CID, for the world to know how this government treats former combatants who do not accept their communist ideas. I hope that on this occasion this letter will be accepted by the Asociación de Combatientes and they take me off the streets, and that all I did for this country is recognized.

Work done by defensores del pueblo (People’s| Defenders) Yadiraydis Lacoste Duquesne and Pedro Pablo Celestrín Reina, CID delegation in Holguín.

By the People’s Defense (Defensoría del Pueblo), Yadiraydis Lacoste Duquesne and Pedro Pablo Clestrín Reina, Defensoría del Pueblo Coordinator for Eastern Cuba, Holguín delegation.

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Four ambulance accidents in one month, only 4 of 9 work


Artemisa, October 4, 2017. Four accidents in a row occurred during september at Central de Ambulancias (Ambulance Center) in Artemisa, according to institution sources. This is due to the poor management of the center’s administration, which has hired inexperienced drivers that have been responsible for these accidents. All these events occurred as patients were being taken to hospitals in other municipalities, who have not only been burden with the weight of their ailments but to the added psychological trauma they have suffered after each incident which fortunately have not claimed any lives.

The Ambulance Center in Artemisa, the capital of the province of the same name, is presently facing a shortage of cars to tend to the high demand by ill patients, this has caused a series of problems that put people’s lives, many of them children, at risk. The population’s disappointment is widespread. Such is the case of some children with zika who last week were transferred to the nearby hospital in Guanajay, 12 kilometers away;  their parents had to see to it on their own, because the physicians’ reply was that there was no ambulance, said Jorge Coto, the father of a two year-old girl sent to that hospital.

The Artemisa Ambulance Center has a vehicle fleet of nine cars, only five of which were working until these accidents began happening. Now, only four cars are working, because one of the damaged vehicles is not ready to run yet. Four cars for a population of 82,000 people. Nine did not solve the problem either.

The Defensoría del Pueblo (People’s Defense) demanded the Artemisa government authorities, in writing, to take the appropriate measures to prevent  incidents of this nature, in a sector whose main function is to save human lives.

No administrative measures have been taken so far in that institution to prevent similar incidents from repeating.

By the Defensoría del Pueblo (People’s Defense), Yosvany Billodre Monduy, Yanet Ordaz and Mileisis Vigoa, CID delegate’s in Artemisa.

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The dictatorship is overcharging food it is selling



Since hurricane Irma went through Cuba, the people are hungrier and in more hardship, although some countries helped with donations of food, construction materials and home appliances, the people have not seen these donations, and the few times they have, it is because the regime is selling them.

In Bayamo, the government is taking advantage of the food shortage to raise the prices of meat and other food process because it has a monopoly, since the government ordered to shut down private businesses that sold meat, pepperoni, ham and other sausages. The people have no alternative but to buy overpriced good sold by the government.

By Manuel Rogelio Rey Carvajal, Defensor del Pueblo (People’s Defender) and CID Delegate in Bayamo.

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They didn’t allow me to be elected, but we won and they lost


The elections for district candidates in Cuba have been a sham. Repression bodies have made direct participation impossible, at all costs, for those of us who strive to have the people choose their authentic representatives. In my case, in zona # 81, CDR# 5, Tomás Valdés, in San Juan y Martínez.
Since I live a few houses away from the CDR, early in the afternoon of September 22 I realized one Jeep and two motorcycles of the Interior Ministry arrived at the place, later on a municipal government Lada car, so, I knew the meeting was not going to be too in tune with those of us who defend the people’s rights.

At 8 p.m., I arrived at the place where the elections would take place, and agents of the so-called respuestas rápidas (quick response units) blocked my way in, while a small group they had assembled began shouting insults at me. They wanted to frighten me and scare the citizens who were there. Despite the insults and the agents preventing me to enter, I insisted in going in, and then three police and two state insecurity henchmen, named Juan and Rodovaldo, took me out by force and almost dragging me took me outside my house. With my wife and my seven year-old daughter present, they yelled at me that if I went back to the meeting, they would beat me up and then make me disappear so I would not be at it on the streets of San Juan.

They are now exposed before the people, because now they have to use force to prevent us from being nominated. They did not allow me to be elected, but we won and they lost. I will continue to fight until one day, in a free Cuba, they elect me as a delegate and I can help my district’s fellow citizens to build up this country.

By Osmani Miranda Prieto, Cuba Independiente y Democrática (CID) activist. Address: Barrio El Paradero, El Varón, San Juan y Martínez, Pinar del Río, Cuba.

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The workers of the brigade in charge have no shoes


To: Dirección Municipal de Acueducto y Alcantarillado (Drainage and Sewage Municipal Service)

My name Miladis de la Torriente Riera, I live at calle 8 No.17, Pueblo Viejo, Jesús Méndez, Las Tunas.

I address you because at the end of calle 10, La Cañada, where I walk through every day on my way to work, sewage water has been running there for more than 10n days. Neighbors told me they had submitted a complaint and nothing was solved, because they were told the workers of the brigade in charge had no shoes for work and there was too much work in the municipality.

There are neighbors who suffer from allergic diseases, mainly children and elderly persons. They have had to open a “corridor” to enter and exit their houses. I urge you to solve these problems which, besides being completely unpleasant, also go against the local neighbors’ health.

By Yuset Rodríguez Arias and Hilda Arias Arias, Defensores del Pueblo (People’s Defenders)

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Cuba, the land of happy children



In light of the apprehensive reform efforts by the Castro government after the last plenary meeting of the Communist Party in 2011, major discrepancy is seen between these policies which determine the nation’s economic course and the people’s needs and interests. Among other problems, we find ourselves before the irrefutable reality that for many these policies are at least insufficient to create an appropriate environment for the true and tangible development of a human being as an individual, beyond the mass and the control mechanisms, the new man and the worn out leftist speeches, a social being that manages enough economic solvency to allow him to fulfill a life project, create a family, properly enjoying each stage.


Summer is practically over, or at least the vacation stage, when many of us have our little ones for almost two months. As usual, recreational options are increasingly difficult to find each season. Emblematic places such as the Acuario Nacional (National Aquarium), the Parque Zoológico (Zoological Park), el Rodeo de Rancho Boyeros (Boyeros Ranch Rodeo) or popular camoping sites are in outright decadence. The same happens with other municipal sports areas, let alone the practically-disappeared neighborhood movie theaters, which were our parents’ and grandparents’ Sunday afternoon delight.


An interesting issue is the hazardous trip to beaches east of Havana, such as El Mégano, Mar Azul, Santa María or Guanabo, which requires admirable character, because boarding a 400 route (the A40, as Transporte Habana –Havana Transport- now calls it) in the afternoon or in the morning could turn out dangerous in the midst of major crowds and the swimmers’ many excess drinks, while other, those who can, pay the 30 or 50 pesos national currency per passenger charged by an almendrón (1950’s US made car) taxi on the Havana-Guanabo route, and the most privileged take rented cars which for 25 or 30 CUC leave at the door of your house almost as soon as you come out of the water.


For a Cuban family today, at the bottom and on foot, vacation time is particularly difficult. As parents, we want the best for our children. But we deal with that feeling of frustration, of impotence, when we cannot give our children the due amusement time they need, as we also do, because those are the memories we will treasure forever, the ones they will keep when they are older and we are not anymore, they ones that will be inspirational when they hold their future children’s or grandchildren’s little hands, and as we did with them, go on a walk and teach them, among smiles, that daily wisdom, those values we need so much as individuals and as a society.


So, how do explain an 8 or 11 year-old child that, although you spend weeks and months working, to the extent that sometimes we do not have time to play a while with them or check their school homework, during a stroll there are so many things they will have no access to, so many candies or toys you will not be able to buy them, clothes or shoes they will not even think of wearing, technologies they will only be able to dream of, how to take them on a walk without later putting at risk the purchase of weekly goods. How can you manage to avoid the embarrassment a child puts you in when, in front of everyone and in the middle of a store, he asks you to buy some candy when in your wallet you barely carry enough for a liter of oil or a bag of detergent. Without mention of how complicated the situation becomes when the children grow up, reach adolescence and, with it, being in fashion, group acceptance and paying private teachers to reduce the education system’s deficiencies, and the youngster managing to somehow reach the university.


Nowadays, the prices of clothing and toys children buy are constantly higher. That although, to make this assertion, we use official prices, those that you find on products in any state installation, usually in currency.


Thus, for example, a pair of shoes for a 2 or 3 year-old could cost you from 15 to even 30 CUC (same in dollars), for children who are 8 and 12 always more than 25 CUC, a short and t-shirt set some 12 to 15 CUC, a shirt 12 CUC, and a pair of jeans 18 CUC, a baby carriage between 45b and 120 CUC, a crib more than 150 CUC (at TRD stores I have not seen them, but if they sell them it is above 200 CUC. Disposable diapers range between 6 and 15 CUC, depending on size and brand. Some products are assigned through canastillas (baby stores) or national currency stores with subsidized prices, but where quality and variety are lacking and where you have to stand in long lines to buy them.

The high price the government puts on toys is an insult, a joke to the average citizen, the proletariat which supposedly is the reason for the Revolution’s existence.


We are talking about, first, the shortage in the vast majority of currency stores themselves, but if you lead your steps toward select stores at hotels such as Havana Libre, Tritón or Comodoro you will find toy shelves overflowing with products, but you will also need pockets overflowing with money, because prices are, in many cases, exceed 40 and 60 CUC, which is more than 1500 national currency –some three monthly salaries, approximately, to buy your son or daughter a fire engine or a kitchen set or a doll.


Are these phenomena perhaps the cause, since the en on the 1990’s, of the ongoing, fast decline in fertility levels, thus negatively affecting population growth? An unfavorable situation leading the nation to population aging which, together with the complex phenomenon of the youth exodus ton other countries, poses a serious problem which threatens the generational and productive succession, thus irreversibly jeopardizing the nation’s economic and social future.


As part of the initial dilemma, we primarily find the absence of one’s own space to develop the necessary space to create a new family. In Cuban homes we find, in a single house, a certain generational mix which even counters couples’ essential privacy. Convivencia becomes then irresistible when economic limitations come together with something as daily as television and kitchen tastes, different habits and even time for personal hygiene (imagine the routine of any dawn in an apartment originally meant for persons and usually with a single bathroom, occupied by a family made up of three, different-generation couples including three school-age children, and the inconveniences implied merely in getting ready to leave each morning). Such stories repeat themselves behind the doors of thousands of Cuban homes.


Let us not fool ourselves with the statement that “four fit where to fit.” It may perhaps sound well to the ear, but not to the stomach, neither does it respond to the most elementary notion of comfort. Apparently, the government prefers to ignore this situation, one of the many afflict the Cuban population, which apparently will be solved by the work and grace of the revolutionary process’s mythical saints.


Allowing or justifying positions seeking to ignore or to distract us from the issue will never bring a solution that will revert this complex and serious process. Differing are the phenomenon’s causes, most of the related to the incompetence and apathy of a government unable to implement a program to promote and turn into a real and feasible solution something as natural and inherent to humanity itself as maternity, and above all to help normal psychological, spiritual and material development.


How to face these daily challenges with a poor salary, being honest, and without our legs shaking by only imagining it?


It could seem just banal, things that happen, but when you have to choose between buying your child a pair of shoes to go as decently as possible to school and avoid scorn, buying a toy or buying the monthly milk for breakfast, you see these small states from a different angle. And then, on official news casts or a prime time program they tell you about altruism, austerity and solidarity, more they try to convince you that all is well in Cuba and that problems only happen beyond our borders, that the country’s economy is growing and that the embargo is to blame for whatever is missing –as cynical as that.


So, how do explain to a child who is 8 or 11 years old that all the education he will receive is based on lies, on fear, distortion of history and repression, that Cuban society has degenerated into a servile mass at the mercy of the whims of a mediocre and incompetent bureaucrats mob that kidnapped the nation to simply turn it into an extension of their paddock?


That the image of the enemy is a key actor for totalitarian dictatorships’’ stage presentation, that the new man is a major scam, that populism “loves” the poor so much that it multiplies them and that we still live in a bubble that has a lot of Macondo and of Orwell’s 1984, that it is not possible to treacherously watch The Life of Others and that if someday he manages to leave Cuba he will have to face the lack of efficiency we were educated with, but that even so, he will discover that beyond the steel curtain there is a real world, rich in shades, which with its lights and darknesses is not perfect, true, but where at least he will find the possibility to choose for himself and to know the real meaning of the words liberty and democracy.


If the government leadership were really conscious of all this and implemented measures to promote and benefit the flourishing of the individual over the mass, of the private sector without seeing it as a threat to its ideology but as useful tool to facilitate a solution to the compelling need to create a growth and change process  so the Cuban population may improve their life quality, it would show that way, in a clear and simple manner, without so many slogans and words, that it really respects the people it is duty-bound to.


Winston Churchill said it, and history has proved its validity: “socialism is the philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance and the preaching of envy, its inherent virtue being the fair distribution of destitution.”

By Steve Maikel Pardo Valdés, Defensor del Pueblo (People’s Defender) and CID activist in the 10 de Octubre municipality.

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Another CID leader is arrested to prevent his election by the people

Police vehicle outside Pupo’s house

On September 29 of this year, in the afternoon, Rolando Pupo Carralero, CID Coordinator for the Western Region and National Executive member, was arrested. The detention was perpetrated to prevent him from taking part in the assembly to nominate candidates for the Poder Popular (Popular Power) delegates election scheduled for that date at 8:00 PM at the social installations of the “Rigoberto Fuentes” cooperative. Because of his popularity, Pupo’s election was certain.

Rolando Pupo Carralero

The operation was led by state insecurity chief in the San Juan y Martínez Municipality Orestes Ayala, who arrived at Pupo’s house, with two policemen, and told him that he had to accompany them since there was a report, and they had to carry out a confrontation with the accuser.

Upon arrival at the police unit, Pupo was locked in an office, with the excuse of the confrontation with the accuser. After more than two hours, Ayala appeared with an elderly man, they placed him facing Pupo and said, “this is the one who sold you the beans quintal,” and the gentleman answered with a resounding “no,” and they took the man away. Later on, Orestes Ayala appeared again and began a lengthy interrogation about CID activities.

Rolando Pupo was released after 10 PM in the evening, no charges pressed, and under threats of taking him to prison if he continued to encourage “counterrevolutionaries” to run as candidates in those elections. This is how henchmen who are accessories to the dictatorship’s violations and crimes continue to prevent peaceful opposition leaders and representatives of the people to exercise their rights as Cuban citizens.

By Yusniel Pupo Carralero, Comité de Campesinos Libres (Free Peasants’ Committee) President and Defensor del Pueblo (People’s Defender).

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Hurricane Irma: summary by the CID delegation in Ciego de Ávila


Ciego de Ávila, September 25, 2017.  Many are the damages left by the hurricane as it went through this central zone in Cuba, leaving as a consequence an alarming increase in the province’s economic crisis. The population is terrified, dozens of families are homeless, lodged at shelters with no hygiene conditions, where the state has not guaranteed either drinking water or food.

Official media have not revealed that losses in the farming sector are around 95%. The Empresa de Cultivos Varios La Cuba (Various Crop Enterprise La Cuba), one of the country’s top producer, located in the Pesquería  zone, Baraguá municipality, suffered the total loss of its plantain fields and severe damage to its facilities.

Light industries have been seriously affected by partial or total loss of roofs and stored products due to dampness.

In the housing sector, figures released by the regime are below reality in all municipalities, with houses having suffered total or partial collapse.  Most of the destruction occurred in the north, including Bolivia, Chambas, Morón, Punta Alegre and Turiguanó Island.

Although the road was repaired, in the Jardines del Rey tourist area, in the northern keys, three hotels suffered total collapse, as well as the loss of several species, including the death of thousands of pink flamingo that were in unprotected areas, according to workers’ reports.

Lessons have not been resumed in many municipalities. The education sector was already facing a shortage of books and deteriorated learning material. Now, after this hurricane went through, most of the teachers are not handing out books, because they got wet and could not be saved.

Several municipalities and their communities have no electricity and are isolated because electric and telephone posts fell.

Products that were freely sold before are now rationed through the ration book, and do not cover the people’s needs. The population is upset and quite conscious of the state apparatus’ inability to respond to the ongoing emergency.

CID delegations, through the Defensoría del Pueblo (People’s Defense) in this province will back each victim’s complaint at different institutions, demanding a reply.


By Yanelis Jiménez Téllez, CID Provincial Delegate in Ciego de Ávila, and Yasmani Díaz Romay, Defensoría del Pueblo (People’s Defense) in this province.

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