[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 85 (Wednesday, May 17, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H4227]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LADIES IN WHITE 2017 FREEDOM AWARD
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Mr. Speaker, last night I had the honor of
presenting the International Republican Institute's 2017 Freedom Award
to great freedom fighters in my native homeland of Cuba, the Ladies in
White, las Damas de Blanco, although my dear friend Berta Soler, the
leader of the Ladies in White, was not able to be there. Why? Because
the Cuban regime refused to allow her to leave the island. We were
lucky enough to have one of the organization's founding members, Blanca
Reyes Castanon, with us accepting the award on the group's behalf.
I have had the privilege of knowing both Blanca and Berta for so many
years, and it has been an honor for me to be able to raise awareness
about the brave and inspiring Ladies in White, whether I do it here
from the House floor or by hosting them here in our Nation's Capital or
in my district in Miami, Florida.
Each Sunday in Cuba, the Ladies in White fight for their relatives
and all political prisoners in Cuba, demonstrating peacefully as they
walk to church.
Yet each Sunday, Mr. Speaker, they are harassed. They are beaten.
They are arrested by the regime's thugs.
As a Cuban refugee myself, fleeing the island with my parents when I
was only 8 years old, I have seen how the regime has morphed and
evolved its methods of repression over the years.
Its treatment of the Ladies in White is emblematic of how it treats
all political dissidents, with intimidation, with harassment, with
arbitrary arrests, with short-term detentions, with denying them the
ability to travel, by trying to bully dissidents into silence.
It attempts to disguise its tactics of repression, trying to fly
under the radar so that outside eyes are fooled or placated or feel
that they can simply look the other way. But we won't, Mr. Speaker. We
won't look the other way.
Despite all of the propaganda, despite all of the misguided policy
over the past years, the reality is that the regime's repression is
only getting worse, and dissidents like the Ladies in White are bearing
the brunt of the regime's intimidation and violence.
The regime is terrified of anyone who speaks for their God-given
human rights in Cuba. It wants to project an image to the outside world
that the situation in Cuba is improving, but we must not be fooled, Mr.
Speaker. The regime will do whatever it takes to remain in power. That
is its sole desire, to remain in power. We must be clear-eyed.
We must be honest about what is really going on in Cuba. We must not
be placated by the regime's lies or by those who repeat them. We must
fight for the truth and show the Cuban people that they are not alone,
that together we all stand in solidarity with them in the pursuit of
freedom, in the pursuit of democracy and the ability to practice their
religion, to live without fear of arbitrary arrests, to live without
fear of torture, and finally one day to be able to choose their own
leaders.
And we can start by supporting the faces of Cuba's future, the
dissidents, the human rights champions, the defenders of freedom, like
the brave women of the Ladies in White. They represent the true Cuba.
They are Cuba's future. And it was my honor to present them with the
IRI's 2017 Freedom Award last night.
Congratulations to las Damas de Blanco, the Ladies in White.
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