Oscar Elias Biscet, a 37-year-old physician, ``is still detained, and I
heard one more person is also detained, said Biscet's wife, Elsa Morejon.
Also rounded up were members of the dissident Cuban Liberal Current.
Police had questioned and released 10 dissidents from both groups since
Wednesday, activists in Havana reported.
The Lawton Foundation had called for a street demonstration Thursday to
pay homage to Martin Luther King for his ``civic defiance -- a term
increasingly used in Cuba to describe aggressive but peaceful opposition
to the regime.
``There's been a sort of generational turnover, to some groups that are
more antagonistic, more daring, said Geraldo Sanchez, brother of dissident
leader Elizardo Sanchez, in a telephone interview from Havana.
While most of Cuba's better known dissidents are in their 50s and 60s,
the dissidents rounded up by police this week were all described as being
in their 30s and 40s, most of them professionals with little history of
political activism.
``They haven't seen a lot of jails yet, so they are friskier, a
European diplomat in Havana said.
The activists detained were identified as Biscet, Migdalia Rosado,
Maria de los Angeles Gonzalez, Miriam Cantillo, Ernesto Colas, Alberto
Martinez, Pablo Nelson, Juan Gonzalez, Roberto Peraza, Ofelia Nardo,
Gustavo Toirac and his wife, Ana Maria Ortega. Controls eased
``The opposition now has a larger margin. They are not bothering us all
the time, only when public acts are scheduled, said Hector Palacios Ruiz,
moderate head of the dissident Democratic Solidarity Party.
Human rights activists reported that the 30 arrests of dissidents
recorded in 1998 was about half the number for 1997, and the number of
dissidents in jail fell from 482 in 1997 to 339 last month.
But now a small but growing number of younger dissidents has set out to
test the new, relaxed limits, meeting quietly in private homes to discuss
the tactics of peaceful resistance and daring to stage public
protests. November protest
And foreign journalists saw police pounce on and carry away a lone man
who was shouting human rights and anti-government slogans in downtown
Havana on the 50th anniversary of the Universal Human Rights
Declaration.
Some dissidents have called for public protests during the
Ibero-American summit, expected to bring more than 20 heads of government
and thousands of journalists to Cuba around October or November. Campaign of `civil
defiance'
``These younger people agree there's more space now for some [human
rights] groups, but they say they got into this to improve things for all,
not just themselves, said an official who monitors human rights in
Cuba.
Such thinking appears to concern some of the older dissidents who,
because of age or jail experience, have tempered some of their stands.
``We have more of a margin, but they want to alter that margin, and
could lose everything, Geraldo Sanchez said. ``They take a different
approach, which of course we completely respect.
Younger dissidents protest in Cuba
Generational shift brings more defiant tone to
activism
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald