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Who killed Cuban dissident Oswaldo Payá?

End Impunity: Truth and Memory three and a half years after Oswaldo Payá and Harold Cepero killings
Notes from the Cuban Exile Quarter: End Impunity: Truth and Memory three and a half years after Oswaldo Payá and Harold Cepero killings

Posted by John Suarez
Friday, January 22, 2016

"Three and a half years since the attack that took away #OswaldoPayá and #HCepero. Their hope remains #EndImpunity" - Rosa María Payá Acevedo, over twitter in Spanish and reproduced below

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Rosa María Payá tweeted this photo with her dad Oswaldo Payá

Today marks another sad anniversary that a daughter observed posting a picture from better days when her dad was still alive. The tragedy is that Oswaldo Payá Sardiñas was murdered by agents of the Cuban dictatorship along with Harold Cepero, a young man who was a friend of hers and a youth leader in his nonviolent democratic movement. Three and a half years later and the evidence that an extrajudicial execution was carried out by Castro's state security service has piled up and petitions made to the UN Human Rights Council and Inter-American Commission on Human Rights but nothing has been done and the killers remain at large and unidentified.
Click link above for full article.
Maybe Pope Francis should intervene on behalf of Oswaldo Paya, a truly Cuban Roman Catholic founder of the Christian liberation Movement, in order to solve the murder of him and Cepero and bring the perpetrators to trial, since the UN Human Rights Council and Inter-American Commission on Human Rights have fail to do so.
 
Frustration and opposition with the Castroit regime is rising. A manifestation of this is the worsening human rights situation; the deaths of opposition leaders; the increased violence; and the explosion in the numbers of arbitrary detentions. Solidarity with human rights defenders and pro-democracy activists will be a critical factor in determining whether the regime will achieve and maintain its succession or whether the democratic opposition will achieve a transition to democracy.
 
Rosa Maria Payas Speech at the Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy
Rosa Maria Paya’s Speech at the Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy / Rosa Maria Paya | Translating Cuba

Remarks from Rosa María Payá, Christian Liberation Movement of Cuba

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Rosa Maria leaving Cuba. L for Liberty.

Thank you so much to the organizer of this Summit for Human Rights and Democracy, It is my pleasure to thank to all the friends whom worked to make this meeting possible, to facilitate my travel here and to all of you who joined us here today.

My country is in a deteriorated and in an unstable situation. My people have suffered the lack of human rights for many decades already. My family have been directly affected and attacked; I think is time to stop. It is time to change and an every time growing group of Cubans works for make true that change.

At the same time the Cuban government has developed a series of legal reforms and public messages designed to preserve its power and authority. These reforms do not guarantee the citizen rights, so: this is the Fraud Change.

I want to be clear about something: the lack of human rights is the principle reason, for the suffering, poverty and social problems of our people. Cubans, like all human beings, we need to be free to be prosperous. Europe is the prove that a country doesn’t have to choose between be economically successful or to be a state of right. And Cuba is neither of the two things.
Click link above for full article.
Video of Rosa Maria Paya, the daughter of slain Cuban human rights and democracy activist Oswaldo Paya at the “Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy” on February 19th, 2016, demanding international investigation into her father death.

 
HRF to UN: Inquire into Suspicious Death of Oswaldo Payá in Cuba
https://humanrightsfoundation.org/news/tag/united-nations

Feb. 24, 2016 | Press Releases

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Brenda Vukovic from the OHCHR with Rosa María Payá and Javier El-Hage at Palais Wilson

GENEVA (February 24, 2016) — Today, Human Rights Foundation (HRF) concluded a round of high-level meetings with representatives from the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, including the U.N. Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary, or arbitrary executions (U.N. Special Rapporteur). In a meeting with staff members from the U.N. Special Rapporteur’s office, HRF presented the conclusions of its July 2015 legal report, which strongly suggests that Cuban dissident Oswaldo Payá’s 2012 death was an extrajudicial execution carried out by the Cuban government. Payá’s daughter, Rosa María, joined HRF at Palais Wilson and requested that the U.N. Special Rapporteur demand the Cuban government to provide an official and comprehensive explanation for each of the violations presented in HRF’s legal report.
Click link above for full article.
The suspicious death of Cuban dissident Oswaldo Payá attracted the attention of the Human Rights Foundation which “strongly suggests that Cuban dissident Oswaldo Payá’s 2012 death was an extrajudicial execution carried out by the Cuban government”, and requested that the U.N. open an investigation. Adding insult to injury, the Castroit regime is a member of the U.N. Human Rights Council, and until this moment no investigation has been carried out.
 
Video of mass in homage of Oswaldo Payá and Harold Cepero in Havana, Cuba. Rosa María Payá reminisces about his father death in the same chapel where the funeral services took place

 
HRF to UN Inquire into Death Threats Against Rosa María Payá in Cuba
https://humanrightsfoundation.org/n...threats-against-rosa-maria-paya-in-cuba-00522

GENEVA (March 16, 2016) — Yesterday, Human Rights Foundation (HRF) submitted an urgent appeal to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary, or arbitrary executions (U.N. Special Rapporteur), requesting that he call on the Cuban government to provide an official and comprehensive explanation regarding the state’s treatment of Rosa María Payá. The daughter of late Cuban dissident Oswaldo Payá, Rosa María has suffered death threats and acts of intimidation at the hands of state security forces while campaigning on the island.

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Click link above for full article.
Rosa María Payá, like her murdered father Oswaldo Payá, create a lot of negative publicity for the Castroit tyrannical regime. The solution of the regime is always the same, to get rid of the person that foment trouble. Hopefully international pressure will keeps the Castroit regime from harming her.
 
The article “Biotechnological Development under the Castroit Tyranny’, on “The Mysterious Deaths in the Castroit Regime-Part 3”, shows how the tyrannical Castroit regime deal with the so call “traitors” through the regime control “wonderful” health system. It is very simple and safe with the use of the “Bulgarian treatment” and inoculation of lethal diseases.
Link: Biotechnological Development under the Castroite Tyranny
 
We should not forget the thousands of Cubans executed without due process, imprisoned, perishing trying to escape in make shift rafts, forced into exile, since the reign of terror of the Castro brothers started 57 years ago.
 
Rosa María Payá: “Totalitarianism is not broken in Cuba, we can not pretend it is”
Rosa María Payá: “Totalitarianism is not broken in Cuba, we can not pretend it is” / EFE (14ymedio), María Tejero Martín – Translating Cuba

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Rosa María Paya (Photo: Orlando Luis Pardo Lazo)

María Tejero Martín
May 23, 2016

EFE (via 14ymedio), María Tejero Martín, Oslo, 23 May 2016 — Cuban opposition member Rosa María Payá said Monday, in an interview with EFE, that the “totalitarianism” of the government led by Raul Castro “has not broken” despite the open contact with the United States and the European Union (EU), and so she asked that these approaches be used to achieve “concrete progress.”

“Rapprochement with Cuba is very good, but it depends on how and how it is sold. It also has negative consequences, such as the rest of the world perceiving an internal process of openings toward democracy, and this has not occurred,” said Payá in the Norwegian capital, where she has come to participate in the Oslo Freedom Forum (OFF).

The dissident said that “totalitarianism has not been broken” despite the “legitimacy” with which it might have re-clothed itself after the visits of personalities such as US President Barack Obama, the high representative of the EU for Foreign Policy, Federica Mogherini, Pope Francis or the Rolling Stones.
Click link above for full article.
Rosa María Paya, daughter of Oswaldo Payá a great Cuban democracy leader that was killed by the Castroit regime in 2012, at great risk is carrying on his father work. She is a woman of great courage. !Long live Rosa María Paya!
 
Let Cuba Decide Rosa María Payá
https://oslofreedomforum.com/talks/let-cuba-decide



2016 Oslo Freedom Forum
May 24, 2016

After her father was killed in a car accident, Rosa María Payá had two choices: Keep her head down, or raise her own voice. She chose the latter. Today, despite the threats Cuban dissidents face from the Castro regime, Payá is demanding accountability for her father’s death and is pushing forward on his ambitious plan for a free and democratic Cuba.
Rosa María Payá talk about her dad, his struggle for freedom and his murder by the Castroit regime among many other things. She is an inspiring person.

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Rosa María Payá with her late father.
 
Let Cuba Decide Rosa María Payá
https://oslofreedomforum.com/talks/let-cuba-decide



2016 Oslo Freedom Forum
May 24, 2016

After her father was killed in a car accident, Rosa María Payá had two choices: Keep her head down, or raise her own voice. She chose the latter. Today, despite the threats Cuban dissidents face from the Castro regime, Payá is demanding accountability for her father’s death and is pushing forward on his ambitious plan for a free and democratic Cuba.
Rosa María Payá talk about her dad, his struggle for freedom and his murder by the Castroit regime among many other things. She is an inspiring person.

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Rosa María Payá with her late father.
 
Month in memory of two Cuban human rights martyrs: Call for articles
Notes from the Cuban Exile Quarter: Month in memory of two Cuban human rights martyrs: Call for articles

June 23, 2016

Remembering Oswaldo Payá and Harold Cepero

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Christian Liberation announces month in memory of Oswaldo and Harold

Christian Liberation announces month in memory of Oswaldo and Harold

July 22, 2016 will mark four years since Oswaldo Payá Sardiñas, and Harold Cepero Escalante were killed in Cuba under suspicious circumstances that have led to demands for an international investigation, a report that points to the involvement of state security, and survivor testimony that points to murder. In the meantime family, friends and admirers continue to mourn their passing. The Christian Liberation Movement on the month leading up to the fourth anniversary of their passing is requesting those who knew the two men to write an article or chronicle about them.

Message from the Christian Liberation Movement:

In this month in memory of Oswaldo and Harold we invite those who knew them to send an article or chronicle with anecdotes related to them (between 260-400 words long).

You can send them to: info@oswaldopaya.org
The U.S. government and the international community must continue pushing for the Castroit regime to allow an impartial, third party investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of Oswaldo and Harold.
 
Despite the Obama Administration’s avoidance of Cuban pro-democracy activists such as Rosa Maria Payá, we should continue to stand with them in their struggle for human rights and democracy. It is a humanitarian duty and a matter of honor.
 
Oswaldo Payá: A Story of Injustice
https://humanrightsfoundation.org/news/oswaldo-paya-a-story-of-injustice-00564

Thor Halvorssen
10, 22, 2016 | Commentary

HRF president Thor Halvorssen and HRF international legal associate Roberto González on the fourth anniversary of the death of Cuban pro-democracy dissident Oswaldo Payá.

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Payá in Havana in 2005. (Claudia Daut/Reuters)

Four years after Payá’s death in a mysterious car accident, his family is still searching for the truth.

Today marks the fourth anniversary of the death of Cuban pro-democracy dissident Oswaldo Payá Sardiñas. Despite the Castro regime’s perpetual smear campaign against him — the government has labeled him a “worm” and a “mercenary” — Payá is internationally recognized as the most prominent Cuban activist of the last 25 years in the Communist island.

In 1988, Payá founded a political movement to promote democratic transition in Cuba. The most prominent effort was the Varela Project, a draft law that — through the collection of more than 11,000 signatures and in observance of requirements set by the Cuban constitution — proposed a referendum that would allow Cubans to decide on legal reforms that would enable the respect of individual rights.

Castro’s regime didn’t take Payá’s work lightly, and it vilified the Varela Project as a CIA-funded, imperialist attempt to undermine Cuba’s constitution. As a result, almost everyone involved with the project was sent to jail and Cuba’s national assembly swiftly approved a set of constitutional reforms affirming the island’s “irrevocable” commitment to the Communist system. Despite this setback, Payá continued struggling for democratic change.

Exactly four years ago, on July 22, 2012, Oswaldo Payá was traveling by car from Havana to Santiago de Cuba. Cuban pro-democracy activist Harold Cepero, Spanish youth-party leader Ángel Carromero, and Swedish politician Jens Aron Modig were traveling with him. According to the Cuban government, Carromero lost control of the vehicle and crashed into a tree on the side of a highway in the province of Granma. The government claims that Oswaldo Payá and Harold Cepero died in the crash.
Click link above for full article.
In a July 2015 email disseminated by Wikileaks, John Podesta, campaign manager for Hillary Clinton states that, “Yes. Oswaldo Paya. The Cuban government forced him off the road and killed him almost certainly.” No doubt that the Obama administration have evidence to affirm it.
 
Hopefully president elect Trump will demand and support an independent investigation into the death of Oswaldo Paya and Harold Cepero. Not only the United States government, but the governments of Spain, Sweden and many foreign ministries have information about his “accidental” death.
 
Let Cubans choose their future
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...02_story.html?utm_term=.8c591a72cd37#comments

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People line the street as they await the arrival of a military convoy with the flag-draped chest containing the remains of Fidel Castro. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

By Rosa María Payá Acevedo
December 1, 2016

Rosa María Payá Acevedo is president of the Latin American Youth Network for Democracy.

The tyrant is dead, but his tyranny is still alive.

Today on the island, the communist Castro-totalitarianism regime survives the corpse of its most visible head. That is why the repression continues and in fact intensified a few hours after the news of Fidel Castro’s death, with the arrests and harassment of opponents.

And it is why the universal value of the right to decide our future must now take center stage. This is a right that belongs to all Cubans by virtue of our humanity. It is a right that has been violated for more than half a century and that today is denied to us by the Cuban constitution, which prohibits us, as a people, from determining the economic, political and social system under which we want to live.

One after another, the world’s authoritarians have proclaimed their mourning for Castro. From them, we expected it. But it is always disappointing, if not surprising, to see presidents of democratic countries and world religious leaders join the likes of North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un in sentiments of regret for Castro’s passing.
Click link above for full article.
This is what President elect Trump said about Fidel Castro death: "Today, the world marks the passing of a brutal dictator who oppressed his own people for nearly six decades. Fidel Castro's legacy is one of firing squads, theft, unimaginable suffering, poverty and the denial of fundamental human rights. While Cuba remains a totalitarian island, it is my hope that today marks a move away from the horrors endured for too long, and toward a future in which the wonderful Cuban people finally live in the freedom they so richly deserve."

Fidel Castro campaign of terror force his opponents into exile, sentenced them to jail for many years, and executed thousands of them officially or extra judicially, like in the case of Oswaldo Payá and Harold Cepero.
 
What Rosa María Payá is complaining about is the support and recognition of the Castroit tyrannical regime by democratic countries, which are turning a blind eye to the tragedies, pain and deaths caused to the Cuban people during 58 years by the regime. She is simple asking for the moral support and solidarity of the international community to hold a plebiscite to decide the political future of the Cuban people in a peaceful way.
 
El Sexto’s’ American Lawyer and Two Activists Arrested in Havana
Rosa Maria Paya Acevedo – Translating Cuba

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(L to R) Gorki Aguila, Luis Alberto Marino and Kimberly Motley in Havana (Source: Rosa Maria Paya’s Twitter)

Rosa Maria Paya

14ymedio, Miami, 16 December 2016 – Kimberly Motley, an American attorney, and the activists Gorki Aguila and Luis Alberto Marino were arrested this Friday as they prepared to hold a press conference outside the Provincial Court in from of the Capitol Building in Havana. The Cubans were taken to the Zanja police station, but there is no information about the whereabouts of the American lawyer.

“They were going to give a press conference about the situation of Danilo Maldonado, ‘El Sexto,’ who the authorities accuse of damage to public property,” according to Rosa Maria Paya, president of the Latin American Network of Youth for Democracy, who spoke to 14tmedio by phone. Motley also intended to take on the defense of Eduardo Cardet, National Coordinator of the Christian Liberation Movement (MCL).
Cardet his been under arrest since 30 November for “his political activity of leadership within the MCL” according to the Paya. He is accused of “assault,” a crime that carries a prison sentence from one to three years.

On 26 November, El Sexto was arrested after painting several graffiti on the walls of the Habana Libre Hotel, reading “se fue” (He’s gone), and loaded a video to his Facebook profile celebrating the death of Fidel Castro.

Recently he was transferred to Combinado del Este, a high security prison in Havana.
Kimberly Motley is an American attorney and human-rights activist, arrived in Cuba from Afghanistan on December 14. She attempted to defend Danilo, “El Sexto”, a street artist who has been in and out of prison. After Castro’s death, he wrote in a wall “He is gone”. The next day he was arrested and has been in prison without charge. Kimberly went to see him in the prison, but was denied access. She was arrested and the police never told her what was the reason for her arrest, and after several hours she was released. The next day she was told she has to leave the country right away, took her to the airport and sent her back to the U.S.
 
Thor Halvorssen, President of Human Rights Foundation, called Motley's arrest an "outrageous abuse" which he said "is a sad reality of Cuba's ongoing totalitarianism." Those protecting Cubans that don’t agree with the regime, run the risk to be sent to jail like in this case. And yes, torture and beatings are quite common on the island of Dr. Castro.
 
As she said, what the Castroit regime did to her is “legally and morally reprehensible”. The Castroit tyrannical regime has no respect for human right. Of course, Progressives activist will not care about human rights abuses committed. They will no calls for boycotting companies that are in business with the tyrannical regime, like they have done in similar cases with Rightwing regimes.
 
OAS chief denied visa to visit Cuba
OAS chief denied visa to visit Cuba - News - JamaicaObserver.com

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

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Luis Almagro (File photo)

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — Cuban authorities have denied a visa to the head of the Organization of American States, Luis Almagro, to travel to the communist-ruled island to receive a prize from a dissident organization, he said Wednesday.

Almagro had been invited to receive a prize named for dissident Oswaldo Paya, who died in 2012 in a car crash under mysterious circumstances.

"My request for a visa for the official OAS passport was denied by the Cuban consulate in Washington," Almagro said in a letter to Paya's daughter Rosa Maria, who organised the ceremony to confer the prize.

Almagro said he was informed by Cuban consular authorities that he would be denied a visa even if he travelled on his Uruguayan diplomatic passport.

The Cubans conveyed to a representative of Almagro that they regarded the motive of his visit an "unacceptable provocation," and expressed "astonishment" at the OAS's involvement in what they deemed anti-Cuban activities, he said.

Almagro said he asked that the decision be reversed, arguing that his trip to Cuba was no different from events he had participated in other countries of the region.

Two other political figures who wanted to travel to Cuba for the award ceremony — Mexico's former president Felipe Calderon and former Chilean education minister Mariana Aylwin — said they also had been denied visas.

Cuba was suspended from the OAS in 1962 at the height of the Cold War, and has declined to return despite having been readmitted in 2009.

Since Cuba's suspension, the only OAS secretary general to visit the island was Jose Miguel Insulza, a Chilean who attended a Latin American summit in Havana in 2014.
This is a blatant demonstration that the tyrannical Castroit regime has no respect what so ever for democracy, freedom and human rights. This is an affront to all countries members of the OAS, and in particular Uruguay, Chile and Mexico.
 
So far, I have not seeing any criticism of the Castroit regime by the mainstream media for the flagrant show of censorship. The Progressives will twisty it around saying that this is the case of small country protecting itself from interference in its domestic affairs. Wondering if somebody has a take on it.
 
The regime is worry of any softening of its total grip on power. Many Cubans were prevented to attend Oswaldo Paya Price ceremony, and some were arrested. Among the arrested were to independent journalist when they try to board a flight from Camaguey to Havana.
 
Twenty Ex-Presidents Condemn Cuban Regime for Prohibiting Visits to Dissident Award Ceremony
https://panampost.com/karina-martin...sign-letter-opposing-cuba-prohibiting-visits/

By: Karina Martín - Feb 24, 2017

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A group of Latin American leaders has signed a letter opposing Cuba’s decision to restrict entry to the island based on political views (El Estimulo).

The Democratic Initiative of Spain and the Americas (IDEA) signed a letter expressing their dissatisfaction with the Cuban regime following the denial of entry to former Mexican President Felipe Calderón, OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro, and the Chilean exile Mariana Aylwin.
At least 22 former state and government signatories expressed their “discontent and rejection of the decision of the dictatorial government of Raúl Castro to deny the entry into Cuba of former Mexican President Felipe Calderón of OAS Secretary Luis Almagro and, Also of Laura Mariana Aylwin.”

According to the director of IDEA, Asdrúbal Aguiar, among the signers are: José María Aznar (Spain), Vicente Fox (Mexico), Sebastián Piñera and Ricardo Lagos (Chile) and Álvaro Uribe (Colombia).

The nearly two dozen ex-presidents explained that they are aware that “every state has powers to provide, by law, the necessary requirements for the entry of foreigners into their jurisdiction.”

However, they pointed out that “the right to free movement and movement of persons can only be restricted, to the extent necessary, in a democratic society, to prevent violations of the law itself or to protect public safety and order; Which is not the case in the circumstances that gave rise to the unacceptable restrictions place upon former President Calderón, Secretary General Almagro, and former Minister Aylwin, for whom we express our total solidarity and support.”

The Cuban government said that they denied entry to Almagro, Calderón and Aylwin because they intended to cause an “unacceptable provocation” in Cuban territory. However, the IDEA clarified that the argument used by the Cuban dictatorship to prevent entry to the Caribbean island rings hollow.

“I know that none of us had the slightest intention of making a provocation with the Cuban system,” said the Secretary General of the OAS
It is evident the solidarity of those that signed the letter condemning the Castroit regime with the Cuban people. The tyrannical Castroit clan has been close to 60 years in control of the island by brute force.

This is the list of former Presidents that signed the letter of complaint:

Oscar Arias, Costa Rica
José María Aznar, Spain
Nicolás Ardito Barletta, Panamá
Belisario Betancur, Colombia
Armando Calderón Sol, El Salvador
Rafael Ángel Calderón, Costa Rica
Laura Chinchilla, Costa Rica
Alfredo Cristiani, El Salvador
Fernando de la Rúa, Argentina
Vicente Fox, México
Eduardo Frei, Chile
Osvaldo Hurtado, Ecuador
Luis Alberto Lacalle, Uruguay
Ricardo Lagos, Chile
Mireya Moscoso, Panamá
Andrés Pastrana, Colombia
Sebastián Piñera, Chile
Jorge Tuto Quiroga, Bolivia
Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, Costa Rica
Álvaro Uribe Vélez, Colombia

Not a word so far from the Mainstream media about the 20 ex-presidents signing the letter. Apparently they do not consider this to be an important news.
 
A brave act in Cuba deserves American support
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...a3817ac21a5_story.html?utm_term=.0928b909ecb6

The Post's View
Opinion

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Empty chairs with the names of Organization of American State Secretary General Luis Almagro and Chile's former education minister Mariana Aylwin. (Ramon Espinosa/Associated Press)

By Editorial Board February 24, 2017

BRINGING FREEDOM and democracy to totalitarian Cuba will be no easy task. Two indispensable ingredients, though, must be courage on the part of the country’s dissidents and democrats, and international solidarity with them.

Both were on display in Havana over the past week. At the center of events was Rosa María Payá Acevedo, daughter of the late Oswaldo Payá, a recipient of the European Parliament’s Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought who lost his life in a still-unexplained 2012 car crash. Ms. Payá decided to pay tribute to her father by awarding a human rights prize in his name and chose as the first recipient Luis Almagro, the Uruguayan secretary general of the Organization of American States, who has distinguished himself through forthright condemnation of repression in Cuba’s authoritarian ally Venezuela. Ms. Payá invited former Mexican president Felipe Calderón, former Chilean education minister Mariana Aylwin (daughter of a former president) and Martin Palous, a former Czech ambassador to the United States, to attend.
Click link above for full article.
Obama’s heinous legacy has been his insensitive to the suffering of Cuba’s political prisoners and dissidents. His administration did not responded to the escalation of the repression by the Castroit regime.
 
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