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Cuba’s New Pardon Raises Old Questions
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Another pardon, same old opacityThe Cuban government says it will… |
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Another pardon, same old opacityThe Cuban government says it will pardon 2,010 prisoners, in what state media called a “solidary humanitarian and sovereign gesture” for Holy Week. That is a lot of polished language for a move that still comes with a familiar shortage, the names are not public, and neither is a clear breakdown of how many people are common prisoners and how many are linked to political cases. The official line says the releases depend on conduct, time served, and health. Fair enough. But in a system where the state controls the story, the word “transparency” often seems to be on a permanent rotation schedule.What the government says it is doingAccording to Granma, the pardon applies to people who have shown good behavior, served a meaningful part of their sentence, or have medical issues. The list includes young people, women, adults over 60, foreigners, and Cuban residents abroad who are close to finishing their terms. Officials also said the measure excludes people convicted of violent crimes, sexual offenses, crimes against authority, or serious offenses. That last category is doing a lot of work, because Cuban authorities have long used broad public-order charges to punish peaceful dissent. The government…
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