Cuba Journal

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Cuba Journal

Cuba Journal

@CubaJournal

The leading digital magazine covering the new Cuba. #cuba #travel #news

Miami, FL شامل ہوئے Nisan 2015
341 فالونگ865 فالوورز
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Jason Ian Poblete
Jason Ian Poblete@JasonPoblete·
US LAW says a transition government "does not include Fidel Castro or Raul Castro," not the "Castro family" 22 USC Ch. 69A: CUBAN LIBERTY AND DEMOCRATIC SOLIDARITY (LIBERTAD) ... (14) Transition government in Cuba ... The term "transition government in Cuba" means a government that the President determines is a transition government consistent with the requirements and factors set forth in section 6065 of this title. §6065. Requirements and factors for determining transition government (a) Requirements ... For the purposes of this chapter, a transition government in Cuba is a government that— (1) has legalized all political activity; (2) has released all political prisoners and allowed for investigations of Cuban prisons by appropriate international human rights organizations; (3) has dissolved the present Department of State Security in the Cuban Ministry of the Interior, including the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution and the Rapid Response Brigades; and (4) has made public commitments to organizing free and fair elections for a new government— (A) to be held in a timely manner within a period not to exceed 18 months after the transition government assumes power; (B) with the participation of multiple independent political parties that have full access to the media on an equal basis, including (in the case of radio, television, or other telecommunications media) in terms of allotments of time for such access and the times of day such allotments are given; and. (C) to be conducted under the supervision of internationally recognized observers, such as the Organization of American States, the United Nations, and other election monitors; (5) has ceased any interference with Radio Marti or Television Marti broadcasts; (6) makes public commitments to and is making demonstrable progress in— (A) establishing an independent judiciary; (B) respecting internationally recognized human rights and basic freedoms as set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, to which Cuba is a signatory nation; (C) allowing the establishment of independent trade unions as set forth in conventions 87 and 98 of the International Labor Organization, and allowing the establishment of independent social, economic, and political associations; (7) does not include Fidel Castro or Raul Castro; and (8) has given adequate assurances that it will allow the speedy and efficient distribution of assistance to the Cuban people. (b) Additional factors In addition to the requirements in subsection (a), in determining whether a transition government in Cuba is in power, the President shall take into account the extent to which that government— (1) is demonstrably in transition from a communist totalitarian dictatorship to representative democracy; (2) has made public commitments to, and is making demonstrable progress in— (A) effectively guaranteeing the rights of free speech and freedom of the press, including granting permits to privately owned media and telecommunications companies to operate in Cuba; (B) permitting the reinstatement of citizenship to Cuban-born persons returning to Cuba; (C) assuring the right to private property; and (D) taking appropriate steps to return to United States citizens (and entities which are 50 percent or more beneficially owned by United States citizens) property taken by the Cuban Government from such citizens and entities on or after January 1, 1959, or to provide equitable compensation to such citizens and entities for such property; (3) has extradited or otherwise rendered to the United States all persons sought by the United States Department of Justice for crimes committed in the United States; and (4) has permitted the deployment throughout Cuba of independent and unfettered international human rights monitors. @title22/chapter69A&edition=prelim" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?pat…
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Alexander Britell
Alexander Britell@abritell·
@wpengine is not letting me cancel our account. Never seen anything like this. Considering litigation. @WPESupport
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Mailyn Salabarria
Mailyn Salabarria@MailynSpeaks·
Important analysis to under how the communist reign of terror of the Castro Family Mafia works.
Cubalex@CubalexDDHH

🚨 #AnálisisLegal | Represión por asociación en Cuba: cuando el castigo alcanza a la familia y las redes de apoyo  En Cuba, la persecución política se traslada con frecuencia hacia familiares y amistades. El monitoreo sistemático de Cubalex demuestra la existencia de la represión por asociación: un patrón de castigo vicario donde el Estado convierte los vínculos afectivos en instrumentos de presión para silenciar a las voces disidentes.  ⚖️ Este patrón adquiere una dimensión transnacional cuando la persona crítica reside en el exilio, utilizando a su familia dentro de la Isla como rehén. Un ejemplo de esto es el de Wendy Campuzano, madre de tres hijos e hija del periodista exiliado Armando Campuzano. El proceso penal en su contra fue un explícito ajuste de cuentas político. Un agente del régimen le advirtió de forma directa: “Tú vas a pagar lo que el gusano de tu padre hizo”, vinculando el caso a un libro crítico publicado por su progenitor. Tras una petición fiscal de seis años, este 2 de junio quedó firme la sentencia de dos años de privación de libertad contra Wendy.  🌍 Este hostigamiento viola flagrantemente el PIDCP y la Declaración Universal de DDHH: 📢 Libertad de expresión: Aísla a las víctimas e impide la circulación de denuncias. 👥 Vida privada y debido proceso: Sustituye la responsabilidad penal individual por un castigo familiar basado en la discriminación ideológica. En casos graves, la amenaza a los hijos constituye tortura psicológica.  👮‍♂️ ¿Qué delitos podrían estar cometiendo las autoridades según el propio Código Penal cubano?  Los funcionarios, fiscales y jueces que ejecutan esta persecución podrían incurrir en delitos por violar los deberes de la función pública, como Abuso de autoridad (Art. 174) por imponer restricciones arbitrarias, Prevaricación (Art. 180) por procesar a inocentes para intimidar políticamente, o Ejecución indebida de sanciones (Art. 181) y Denegación de auxilio (Art. 186.1) por aplicar medidas cautelares ilegales y negar amparo.

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Cuba Journal ری ٹویٹ کیا
Jason Ian Poblete
Jason Ian Poblete@JasonPoblete·
Spain's flagship hotel brand, Meliá Hotels, has announced it is exiting 15 properties in Cuba. Read their press release carefully: "risk assessment," "legal conditions," "external circumstances." No details, but an interesting development that now includes other foreign brands, such as Sherritt (Canada). Not one word about freedom or the Cuban people. Of course, they cannot say a word about freedom since foreign companies have helped keep Cuba politically afloat for decades. Remember, tourism and travel to Cuba is what oil is to the Islamic Regime of Iran, an economic lifeline. Spain, Canada, France, Italy, Germany, China, Russia, Venezuela, the Netherlands, Brazil, and Jamaica all have or have had meaningful commercial presence. There are many others, even right here in LATAM. The EU even passed a blocking statute to shield its nationals from U.S. sanctions compliance. That was a choice, made repeatedly, for thirty-plus years. Now that the United States has begun — and I mean just begun, there is much more the Trump administration can and should do — enforcing the LIBERTAD Act and related authorities more seriously, companies are suddenly reassessing. Better late than never, but let's be precise about what is driving the foreign company change of heart: it is not conscience; it is liability. Americans are still wrongfully detained in Cuba. American claimants are owed billions for property confiscations that were never remediated. Decades of foreign commercial activity in Cuba helped sustain the system that made it all possible. The accountability phase is just getting started. There is a lot to fix. We will see who else recalculates.
Jason Ian Poblete tweet mediaJason Ian Poblete tweet mediaJason Ian Poblete tweet media
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Patrick Oppmann CNN
Patrick Oppmann CNN@CNN_Oppmann·
Raul Castro turns 95 today as the revolution he and his brother Fidel started faces unprecedented pressure and he is under US indictment.
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Patrick Oppmann CNN
Patrick Oppmann CNN@CNN_Oppmann·
There’s been one hour of power today in my neighborhood in Havana —others have had no electricity for days. The situation is fast becoming unlivable for many in Cuba.
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Department of State
Department of State@StateDept·
SECRETARY RUBIO: "Cuba has sponsored terrorism. For example, virtually every left-wing, radical, violent terrorist group in the Western Hemisphere has at some point relied on support from Cuba."
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KUNLUN昆侖
KUNLUN昆侖@Kunluntalk·
@TheEconomist Cuba after the Castros will not be rebuilt by nostalgia alone. The real contest will be over property claims, dollar flows, ports, tourism assets, and who gets there first when the old political structure finally cracks.
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The Economist
The Economist@TheEconomist·
Sixty Miami-based businessmen have been meeting monthly to discuss how to revive Cuba’s economy after the Castros. Others are dusting off plans originally written just after the collapse of the Soviet Union economist.com/the-americas/2…
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