[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 155 (Monday, October 17, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S6569]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LAURA POLLAN, DAMAS DE BLANCO
Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, I came to the Senate floor
because over the weekend a very noble lady in Cuba passed away of a
heart attack, and I want to tell you about her.
Her name is Laura Pollan. She founded the group Ladies in White,
Damas de Blanco. She did so to protest the brutal Castro regime in
Cuba, and her protest was specifically the jailing of 75 people in a
crackdown on dissidents in 2003, one of which was her husband. Many of
those who were imprisoned were married to the ones who became known as
the Ladies in White, including Senora Pollan's own husband, Hector
Maseda.
Since 2003, Laura had gathered the group on most weekends in central
Havana after church. Everybody would wear white and they would hold
gladiolas, a flower that is typical in warm climates. They would stage
their marches, and they would demand the release of their loved ones,
since 2003 when their husbands were jailed.
Damas de Blanco defied this brutal dictatorship, the Castro regime.
For its human rights work, the European Parliament awarded the group
the 2005 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought. Just this year, the
U.S. Government gave Damas de Blanco the Human Rights Defender Award
for ``exceptional valor in protecting human rights in the face of
government repression.''
Damas de Blanco succeeded earlier this year--succeeded. In the face
of this brutal dictatorship, it succeeded when the last of the 75
imprisoned were finally released, including Laura's husband. She and
her husband only had 8 months together before she died of a heart
attack last week.
Despite this group's achievement, Laura Pollan lamented earlier this
year that:
As long as the government is around, there will be
prisoners . . . while they've let some go, they've put others
in jail. It is a never-ending story.
Mr. President, it is a never-ending story, and isn't it typical; here
is a regime that still holds an American citizen there now for 2 years,
Alan Gross. Alan Gross is in ill health. His daughter here in the
States has cancer. Is this regime showing any kind of compassion? Of
course not. Did it show any kind of compassion to those Ladies in White
and their husbands when they swept in, in the middle of the night,
scooped them up and put them in prison because they dared to speak out
their free thoughts?
It reminds us of another regime, one on the other side of the globe,
Iran, which still imprisons an American, Bob Levinson, a former FBI
agent. They still deny they have him, and yet there is plenty of
evidence they do have him. And yet we wait. In Bob Levinson's case, a
wife and seven children wait, and have waited for years and years.
So we say, like Damas de Blanco--just like they said they will
continue to challenge the regime until the day all the Cuban people are
able to enjoy the blessings of freedom--that is all they want. It is so
sad that because of the ties between America and Cuba, with so many
families having been split, with it being only 90 miles away from Key
West, there is a brutal dictatorial regime that still imprisons its
people. But there is one thing they can't imprison: they can't imprison
their minds and their yearning for freedom.
Mr. President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded and that I be allowed to speak in morning
business for as much time as I may consume.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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