The historic announcement Wednesday that the U.S. and Cuba will seek to restore diplomatic and economic ties is more than a new beginning for both countries — it could signal an opportunity for Cuba to finally leave behind an era marred by notorious human rights abuses.
Humanitarian groups and international advocates long-concerned over the dire conditions for dissidents in Cuba welcomed the news, which comes after more than a half-century of hostility between the U.S. and the island nation’s communist government. The White House has pledged to make improving human rights conditions in Cuba a central pillar of mending relations — a goal that got off to a good start with Cuba’s release Wednesday of 53 political prisoners, as well as U.S. aid worker Alan Gross, who had been imprisoned for five years.
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“This is very good news. The current U.S. policy has been totally counterproductive in terms of human rights. This doesn’t completely overhaul it because the embargo is still in place, but it’s a move in the right direction,” said Daniel Wilkinson, managing director of the Americas Division at Human Rights Watch. “There are very, very serious human rights violations in Cuba.”
A flood of additional measures are on the way, with plans to establish an embassy in Havana, increase bilateral travel and commerce, and for Cuba to attend the Summit of the Americas next summer in Panama. The focus now turns to Congress, which will need to approve a legislative path to fully restoring diplomatic ties and lifting economic sanctions.
Humanitarian organizations and political leaders around the world have insisted for years that the economic embargo imposed by the U.S. only exacerbated poor conditions in Cuba. At the United Nations General Assembly in October, 188 out of 192 countries condemned the embargo for doing little to help human rights.
“The Cuban government has been able to use U.S. policy as a pretext, as a rationale, as an abuse of policy,” Wilkinson said. “Cuba has been able to cast itself as the victim — the David standing up to the big Goliath.”
The U.S. has also kept Cuba on the terror designation list for reasons believed to be more political than based in any substantial threat. Now for the first time since 1982, Secretary of State John Kerry is set to begin the process of removing Cuba from the list, and groups are hoping the move will spark an end to what has been a crackdown.
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“This is certainly a very great step — the reaction of the Cuban government in hammering down on freedom of expression has been tied to the embargo,” said Marselha Gonçalves Margerin, advocacy director for the Americas at Amnesty International. “We’re really hopeful that by improving this relationship, this retaliation to the dissidents on the ground will diminish greatly.”
But easing decades of tense relations with the U.S. is not likely to lead to an immediate reversal of what has grown to be harsh crackdown on activists who have defied the Cuban government. The 52-year Castro dictatorship is riddled with a record of allegations of major abuses. Arbitrary arrests often led to harsh prison sentences. State-owned media squashed freedom of speech and the availability of outside information.
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The conditions facing a growing dissident movement within Cuba has slowly garnered international attention with the bits of information made available. In February 2010, political prisoner Orlando Zapata Tamayo died after staging a 85-day hunger strike. That same year, a 134-day hunger strike campaign led by Guillermo Farinas eventually prompted the release of 52 prisoners of conscience — people detained solely due to their expression of their beliefs. Meanwhile some of the most prominent activists are known as “the Ladies in White,” a group of wives and mothers of political prisoners. They have become a symbol of peace in staging protests marches after Mass on Sundays.









