[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 149 (Tuesday, December 9, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H8869-H8870]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REPRESSIVE CUBAN REGIME
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Mr. Speaker, just 90 miles from U.S. shores the
most repressive human rights abuses in our hemisphere are being
perpetrated by a regime that has shown no respect for human life and
that will never change as long as the Castro brothers and their kind
remain in power in Cuba.
Every day these brutal thugs continue to repress 11 million Cubans
who yearn for freedom and the respect of
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their basic human rights. But the regime isn't just a threat to the
people of Cuba. They also operate within the United States, with
sophisticated espionage, tradecraft, and are allies of our worst
enemies.
We have but to remember the story of Ana Belen Montes. A senior
analyst in our Defense Intelligence Agency, Ana Belen Montes was one of
the masterminds of Cuba intelligence in the U.S. She was the top spy
for the Castro regime and undermined U.S. foreign policy efforts
throughout the world due to her nefarious espionage activities. She is
certainly serving a long sentence in Texas.
But Castro also harbors fugitives from U.S. law, such as Joanne
Chesimard. She is a New Jersey cop killer and earned the terrible
distinction of being the first woman on the FBI's most wanted list of
terrorists.
In 2001, Fidel Castro went to Iran and met with Iranian Supreme
Leader Khamenei, and Castro said at that time: Together, Cuba and Iran
will bring America to its knees.
These are just a few of the examples of why it is imperative for the
Obama administration to get tough with Castro, not only to protect our
U.S. national security interests, but also to extend a helpful hand to
the pro-democracy leaders on the island who are struggling for freedom.
The Cuban regime continues to repress independent journalists, human
rights activists, and commits arbitrary detentions every day, all to
thwart any attempt at the exercise of freedom of expression. I will
show you just a few of the names and faces of the voices of those
opposition leaders in the push for freedom on the island, and each
deserves the attention of this body.
Mr. Speaker, this is Berta Soler. Berta Soler is the leader of a
movement called Ladies in White, Las Damas de Blanco, a group of women
tirelessly advocating for the release of political prisoners in Cuba.
These courageous women walk to mass peacefully holding up flowers and
are met with brutal attacks by Castro's state security. Berta Soler
became the leader of this organization after the death of her
predecessor, Laura Pollan.
Laura Pollan started this movement in Cuba. She died under mysterious
causes in October 2011. Many people in the island and outside have
blamed the Castro regime for the unfortunate and suspicious
circumstances of her passing.
We also have many pro-democracy leaders who are still languishing in
Cuban jails, and these are some of their faces. This first young man,
his name is Angel Yunier Remon. He is also known as El Critico. He is
another face of repression on the island. Angel was arrested in March
for criticizing the Castro regime's brutal human rights abuses and the
oppression of 11 million of his fellow countrymen. To this day, El
Critico remains in prison for the mere crime of simply expressing his
right to address grievances through rhyme.
Then there is the face of Sonia Garro. Sonia is another member of the
Ladies in White. Sonia and her husband were arrested 2 years ago in a
violent raid. Her trial has been suspended four times without an
explanation or any reason being given.
Along with Sonia, fighting for the causes of freedom and liberty is
this young man, Jorge Luis Garcia Perez, better known as Antunez, who
has been in prison in Castro's gulag for nearly 17 years. Antunez and
his wife, Yris, have repeatedly been assaulted and beaten by state
security forces, and their scars tell a story of resilience and
commitment to the cause of freedom on the island. They are free now,
but one does not know for how long.
Lastly, Mr. Speaker, there is the case of Juan Carlos Gonzalez,
another freedom fighter I would like to highlight. He is a lawyer who
is blind. He has spent years defending the human rights of the Cuban
people.
These are just a few of the faces of the pro-human rights activists
in Cuba, Mr. Speaker. I could not possibly cover the face of every
single dissident on the island, but these faces are representative of
the horrors of the Cuban regime and the horrors that liberty fighters
face there every day; and that is why, Mr. Speaker, it is our moral
obligation to stand in solidarity with these pro-democracy activists
and to be a voice for 11 million people who are being oppressed and
silenced in Cuba.
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