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5 Cuban officials placed on Visa ban over unfair trails on protesters

By Oluwaseun Sonde


United States of America has imposed visa restrictions on five Cuban officials pursuant to Presidential Proclamation 5377, which suspends non-immigrant entry into States of officers and employees of the Cuban government.


In a statement released by the Department of State on Thursday, while these five officials are connected to unfair trials and unjust sentencing and imprisonment of peaceful July 11, 2021, protesters.


Recalled that thousands of Cubans took to the streets of the capital Havana and other towns in July 2021 in protest over rising food costs, medical shortages and dire socioeconomic conditions that worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic.


United States says this announcement of visa restrictions comes in response to the actions of Cuban government officials that deny Cubans their basic human rights and fundamental freedoms.


According to the statement, "The actions build upon previous efforts to promote accountability for Cuban officials who enable government’s human rights abuses and repressing, including four Treasury Department sanctions actions enacted since July 11.


"And the Department’s November 30, 2021, and January 6, 2022, announcements of steps to impose visa restrictions. These steps underscore our commitment to supporting the Cuban people", the statement added.


Meanwhile, reports has it that nearly hundreds of those sanctioned were sentenced to between five and 25 years in prison, 381 sanctioned for participating in rare, anti government protests that broke out on the island last year.


Of the 381 people sanctioned on Monday, a total of 297 have been sentenced to between five and 25 years in prison for crimes of sedition, sabotage, robbery with force, and public disorder, according to the statement released.


The prosecutor’s office noted that 84 individuals, including 15 young people, were not given prison sentences.


However, it warned that tougher sentences could be imposed for those who breached their sanctions or who engaged in new criminal offences. Cuba’s age of criminal responsibility is 16 years.


“The Attorney General’s Office continues to inform the public about the legal response to the events of July 11, 2021, which attacked the constitutional order and the stability of our socialist state,” the statement said.


In late January, Cuba acknowledged that 790 people were indicted in relation to the protests.


Some of the protesters last year took direct aim at the government of President Miguel Diaz-Canel, chanting “down with the dictatorship” and “we want liberty”.


The Cuban government has previously accused the US of financing and instigating the demonstrations.


But the state’s crackdown on the protests, and the subsequent arrests of, and indictments against, participants, have drawn condemnation from rights groups.


In October, Human Rights Watch accused Havana of systematically engaging in “arbitrary detention, ill-treatment of detainees, and abuse-ridden criminal prosecutions” in response to what were “overwhelmingly peaceful” protests.


“When thousands of Cubans took to the streets in July, the Cuban government responded with a brutal strategy of repression designed to instill fear and suppress dissent,” Juan Pappier, the group’s senior Americas researcher, said in a statement at that time.


“Peaceful protesters and other critics have been systematically detained, held incommunicado and abused in horrendous conditions, subjected to sham trials following patterns that indicate these human rights violations are not the actions of rogue agents.”

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