New York, December 2, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns Thursday's detention of two foreign journalists who were reportedly
interviewing opposition activists in Cuba's central Sancti Spíritus
province. The government was expected to expel the two journalists.
Police detained Polish journalist Anna Bikont, who works for the leading
Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza, and Swiss journalist Nelly
Norton on Thursday night, according to international news reports. Authorities
confiscated photographs taken by Bikont, according to Agence France-Presse,
quoting sources at Gazeta Wyborcza.
The two journalists were taken to Havana, where they awaited expulsion
Friday afternoon. It was not immediately clear whether Norton was working
for a news outlet.
Polish Foreign Ministry spokesman Pawel Dobrowolski said today that Cuban
authorities intended to deport the journalists because they were doing
journalistic work while traveling on tourist visas, according to Polskie
Radio, part of Poland's public radio network. Dobrowolski said the journalists
were arrested while meeting with the activists, AFP reported.
The Spanish news agency EFE quoted Polish embassy sources in Havana as
saying that authorities confiscated the journalists' passports and plane
tickets and told them they had violated their status as tourists.
Under Cuban immigration regulations, foreign reporters who visit the island
to work must apply for journalist visas, which are processed through Cuban
embassies abroad. Cuban officials grant visas to foreign journalists selectively,
CPJ research shows, and they routinely exclude those from media outlets
deemed unfriendly. Cuban law specifies that foreign journalists who travel
to the country on a tourist visa "should abstain from practicing journalism."
In May 2005, authorities detained and expelled at least five foreign journaliststwo
Italians and three Poleswho traveled to Cuba to cover a gathering
of opposition activists. The government said the journalists were expelled
for violating Cuban immigration law because they traveled on tourist visas.
"By detaining and expelling reporters, the Cuban government sends a message
around the world that it does not tolerate critical reporting," CPJ Executive
Director Ann Cooper said. "We call on Cuban authorities to allow both
foreign and Cuban journalists to do their work without harassment."
Cuba is one of the world's leading jailers of journalists, second only
to China. Twenty-four journalists are imprisoned, most of them since a
massive March 2003 crackdown on the independent press and the opposition.

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