New York, December 7, 2005 A Cuban journalist detained
without charge for nearly five months has lost 30 pounds (13.5 kilograms)
in prison and is suffering from serious health problems his wife told
the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Oscar Mario González, a journalist with the independent news agency,
Grupo de Trabajo Decoro, was arrested on July 22, 2005. His wife, Mirta
Wong Sio, said she was worried about his worsening health. González,
61, suffers from osteoarthritis in his neck and back pain. He has problems
sleeping and needs sleep medication, Wong said.
"We are gravely concerned about the health of our colleague Oscar Mario
González who is clearly suffering health problems as a result of
his imprisonment," said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper. "The fact that
he has been held now for nearly five months without any charges being
filed only compounds the injustice."
González is one of 24 journalists currently in jail in Cuba. Most
were detained in a massive crackdown that began in March 2003. Like González
they are being held in cramped, unsanitary conditions and many have developed
serious health problems.
The authorities have not said why he was detained. He is now being held
at the Havana headquarters of the Technical Department of Investigations,
the criminal police, where he shares a small cell with common criminal
suspects. His wife said she is allowed to visit him for 20 minutes every
week in the presence of a police investigator.
" I've asked for his case number, but he hasn't been assigned any ...
he was practicing journalism, they won't give me any other explanation,"
Wong said. González has been transferred four times to police stations
in Havana. In October, he was admitted to the Carlos J. Finlay military
hospital for two weeks for tests because of his ill health. He was later
transferred to the criminal police headquarters in Havana.
Colleagues have speculated that González might have been detained
in connection with a police crackdown that began on July 22, 2005, when
opposition activists planned to hold an antigovernment protest outside
the French Embassy in Havana. Several leaders of the protest group, the
Assembly to Promote Civil Society in Cuba (APSC), were detained the same
day. In all, at least 29 people were detained; most were released without
charge.
In May 2005, González covered the APSC congress for Grupo de Trabajo
Decoro. The unprecedented two-day congress brought together 200 activists
and guests to discuss ways to create a democratic society in Cuba. At
the time, Cuban authorities detained and expelled at least five foreign
journalists who had traveled to Cuba to cover the meeting.
A few days after González's detention, a police investigator told
his wife that he would eventually be prosecuted under the Law
88 for the Protection of Cuba's National Independence and Economy,
which sets penalties of up to 20 years in prison for anyone who commits
"acts that in agreement with imperialist interests are aimed at subverting
the internal order of the Nation and destroy its political, economic,
and social system." However, González's wife said, she never received
any confirmation that González would be tried under Law 88.
Journalists
currently jailed in Cuba.

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