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Cuban
Man Hunger Strikes
For Internet Access
By Jason Lee Miller
WebPro News
USA
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
March 19, 2006
There'll be
no puns here for the subject of this article-no "hunger for
this" or "dying for that"-puns, a lower form of humor
they say, would denigrate the tribulation of a journalist and his
newborn raison d'etre-like calling a spoof a sincere flattery. Simply,
a Cuban man has embarked on a hunger strike in an effort to win
unrestricted access to the World Wide Web.
''I got on my
knees and said, `Down With Fidel!'" said Guillermo Farinas,
a 41-year-old psychologist-turned-independent-(and anti-establishment)-journalist,
as he reported the events of a government agent mob attack to The
Miami Herald.
``They started
kicking and beating me, bruising my back, arm and head. They stopped
when they saw I would not lose my dignity and say things I didn't
feel," he continued. The attack was prompted by uncensored
email about human-rights abuses in the country sent from an Internet
café in Santa Clara.
Cuba, a country
whose octogenarian dictator, Fidel Castro, disallows a free press
and blocks Internet access outside of local networks, is on Reporter's
Without Borders list of "The 15 enemies of the Internet,"
alongside China, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Tunisia.
After Farinas'
refusal to take back his words, his email was blocked, prompting
a hunger strike that began on January 31st. Farinas has since been
moved to a local hospital where he is refusing medication, kept
in critical (and deteriorating) condition by IV drip.
"The hunger
strike continues. He has been isolated in intensive care since Thursday
(March 2nd)," said Niurbis Diaz, who worked with Farinas as
an independent reporter. "He is refusing pills and injections,"
she told Reuters by telephone.
"His head
hurts, and his legs are bothering him," said his mother, Alicia
Hernandez. "Sometimes, his blood pressure drops, but other
times he's stable. Everyone, not just me, but the people who call
him from outside Cuba, plus the doctors and nurses, have tried to
get him to stop, but he will not give in. He is determined."
Failing to dissuade
Farinas to give up his plight, activists are making their pleas
the Cuban government.
"We call
on authorities to respect his rights, agree to his petition immediately,
and save his life," said dissident Oswaldo Paya.
The Cuban government
has met the situation with chilly indifference, shifting the blame
to U.S. economic sanctions that prevent underwater fiber optic connectivity.
According to the U.S. State Department, Cuba has jailed 333 people
for political reasons.
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