Cuba
releases artist 'El Sexto,' considered prisoner of
conscience
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[October 21, 2015] By
Nelson Acosta
HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuba on
Tuesday released a graffiti artist whom Amnesty
International had considered a prisoner of conscience
and Cuban dissidents had celebrated as a touchstone case
as he was jailed over a satire of Fidel and Raul Castro.
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Danilo Maldonado, 32, best known as "El Sexto" (The Sixth),
was held for 10 months for "disrespect of the leaders of the
revolution" for painting "Fidel" and "Raul" on the backs of a
pair of pigs in apparent reference to former leader Fidel Castro
and his brother and current president, Raul Castro, Amnesty
International said.
Amnesty in September declared Maldonado the country's only
prisoner of conscience but said it was considering other cases.
Government officials "don't have a sense of humor," Maldonado
told reporters after his release. "The crazy thing is, the show
didn't even happen and look at the repercussion it had."
Police discovered the animals in the trunk of Maldonado's taxi
before he intended to display them in a Christmas Day art show.
The Cuban government maintains it does not have any political
prisoners and characterizes Cuba's small but vocal dissident
community as mercenaries paid by U.S. interests to destabilize
the government.
Dissidents had made Maldonado's case a rallying cry. The
government never commented on it.
Raul Castro and President Barack Obama surprised the world last
Dec. 17 by announcing the two former Cold War foes would end
decades of confrontation and seek to restore diplomatic ties.
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In conjunction with detente, Cuba released 53 prisoners who
Washington had considered political, but Maldonado was detained
eight days after the historic announcement.
The dissident Cuban Commission of Human Rights and National
Reconciliation estimates there are about 60 political prisoners in
Cuba, including some two dozen held for peaceful acts of political
protest.
"Now I am going to try to recover my energy and be with my
daughter," Maldonado told Reuters by telephone upon his release. "I
want to travel to the United States in the future and thank all the
people who supported the cause to have me freed."
Amnesty International welcomed Maldonado's release but said he never
should have been jailed in the first place.
"Peacefully expressing an opinion is not a crime," Erika
Guevara-Rosas, Americas director at Amnesty International, said in a
statement.
(Reporting by Nelson Acosta; Editing by Daniel Trotta, Chris Reese,
G Crosse and Leslie Adler)
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