Posted at 8:50 p.m. EST Tuesday, February 9, 1999

Cuban repression of journalists alleged

VIENNA -- (EFE) -- Cuban President Fidel Castro's security apparatus continues to ``repress Cuban journalists who attempt to file independent reports on what is happening in their country,'' the International Press Institute (IPI) charged Thursday.

``Cuban authorities routinely threaten, arrest and jail journalists, often attempting to `persuade' them to leave the country,'' the IPI stated in its report on the status of freedom of the press in the world.

Although Havana has authorized two U.S. media outlets, the CNN network and the Associated Press, to open permanent bureaus on the island, foreign reporters are threatened and often expelled, the IPI asserted.

The Castro regime denied many foreign journalists permission to cover Pope John Paul II's visit to Cuba in January 1998, including reporters for the Telemundo network, the U.S. dailies The Miami Herald and the St. Petersburg Times, Costa Rica's La Nacion and Argentina's Clarin, among others. (In most cases, the news outlets were allowed to replace the vetoed reporters with others, but all journalists identified as working for The Herald were denied official permission to cover the visit.)

Cuba ``continues a campaign of persecution against more than 40 journalists working outside the state media who send their work directly to the United States for use in foreign publications or on the Internet,'' the IPI said.

The report highlights the plight of Cuban journalists jailed for their independent reporting, including Bernardo Arevalo of Linea Sur Press, who, according to IPI, has endured repeated beatings at the Ariza prison; Lorenzo Paez of Cuba's Independent Press Bureau, jailed in the western province of Pinar del Rio; and Juan Carlos Recio Martinez, of the Cuba Press Agency, condemned to hard labor in the central province of Villa Clara.

Despite the creation of several independent news agencies in 1995, the Castro regime remains intent on ``controlling everything published and imposing strict control over access to the Internet,'' as well as requiring all typewriters to be registered and authorities to be notified of possession of all fax machines or copiers.

The government bans publication of any article critical of the Cuban revolution or its leaders.

In addition, legislation regulating anti-government propaganda or insults directed at government officials mandates prison terms of three months to one year, which may be extended to three years if the attacks are directed against Fidel Castro himself or members of the National Assembly or the Council of State.

Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald