Cuba accuses blogger Yoani Sanchez of ‘provocation’

HAVANA (Reuters) – Cuban authorities accused blogger Yoani Sanchez yesterday of staging a “provocation against the Cuban Revolution” after she and others spoke publicly about censorship during an arts performance in Havana.

Sanchez, whose “Generacion Y” blog is critical of Cuba’s government and widely read abroad, took the microphone during an event on Sunday in the Havana Biennial arts festival and read a manifesto saying the Internet was opening a “crack” in government control.

“The time has come to jump over the wall of control,” she said.

In response, the Biennial organizing committee posted a statement on the Internet saying it “considers this to be an anti-cultural event of shameful opportunism that offends Cuban artists and foreigners who came to offer their work and solidarity.”

The statement described Sanchez, without using her name, as a “professional dissident” and one of a number of “individuals in the service of the anti-Cuban propagandistic machinery that repeated the worn-out claims for ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’ demanded by their sponsors.”

Cuban authorities consider dissidents to be mercenaries working for the United States, which has openly supported opposition to Cuba’s communist-run government.

The event was part of a performance by Cuban artist Tania Bruguera, who put up a microphone at an arts centre in Old Havana and told people in attendance they could say whatever they wanted for one minute.

Participants were flanked by two actors dressed in olive green fatigues. A white dove was placed on the shoulder of each speaker in an apparent parody of a famous speech by Fidel Castro.

In January 1959, as Castro spoke to the masses in Havana declaring victory over dictator Fulgenico Batista, a white dove landed on his shoulder in what was said to be a moment of serendipitous symbolism.

Sanchez was selected by Time Magazine as one of the world’s most influential people in 2008, but her Cuban readership is limited because Internet access is restricted on the island.

“Since microphones are not abundant, I just took the opportunity,” Sanchez wrote in her blog to explain her participation in Sunday’s event.