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Victor
Rolando Arroyo |
New York, September 23, 2005—The Committee to P rotect Journalists
is concerned about the health of jailed independent journalist Víctor
Rolando Arroyo who went on hunger strike two weeks ago and is now in the
prison hospital, his sister Blanca Arroyo told CPJ. Arroyo refused food
to protest mistreatment at the Guantánamo Provincial Prison, in eastern
Cuba, where he is serving a 26-year sentence. He is one of 25 independent
journalists behind bars in Cuba.
Arroyo's wife, Elsa González, learned of the hunger strike from family
members of other dissidents at Guantánamo, Blanca Arroyo told CPJ. González
made the long journey to the prison from her home in Pinar del Río on
Wednesday and is still waiting for her visit to be authorized. According
to inmates who have seen Arroyo and passed information to his family,
the journalist appears very weak and possibly dehydrated, his sister said.
González has not seen Arroyo for four months.
"We are extremely concerned about the health of our colleague and the
humiliating treatment to his family members," said CPJ Executive Director
Ann Cooper. "We renew our demands that the Cuban government release all
24 independent journalists unconditionally."
Arroyo, 55, a journalist with the independent news agency Unión de Periodistas
y Escritores de Cuba Independientes (UPECI), was sentenced in April 2003
for committing acts "aimed at subverting the internal order of the nation
and destroying its political, economic, and social system."
Journalists
currently jailed in Cuba.

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