Cuba starts freeing prisoners a day after the US said it would lift
terror designation
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[January 16, 2025]
By ANDREA RODRÍGUEZ
HAVANA (AP) — Cuba started releasing some prisoners Wednesday as part of
talks with the Vatican, a day after President Joe Biden's administration
announced his intent to lift the U.S. designation of the island nation
as a state sponsor of terrorism.
More than a dozen people who were convicted of different crimes — and
some of them were arrested after taking part in the historic 2021
protests — were released during the day, according to Cuban civil groups
following the cases of detainees on the island.
Among those freed was tattooist Reyna Yacnara Barreto Batista, 24, who
was detained in the 2021 protests and convicted to four years in prison
for attacks and public disorder. She was released from a prison in the
province of Camagüey, and told The Associated Press that eight men were
also freed along with her.
On Tuesday, the U.S. government said it notified Congress about the
intent to lift the designation of Cuba as part of a deal facilitated by
the Vatican. Cuban authorities would release some of them before Biden's
administration ends on Jan. 20, officials said.
Hours later, the Cuban foreign ministry said the government informed
Pope Francis it would gradually release 553 convicts as authorities
explore legal and humanitarian ways to make it happen.
Havana did not link the prisoners' release to the U.S. decision on
lifting the designation but said it was “in the spirit of the Ordinary
Jubilee of the year 2025 declared by His Holiness,” referring to the
Vatican's once-every-25-year tradition of a Jubilee, in which the
Catholic faithful make pilgrimages to Rome.
Cuba's Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez did not mention the release on
Wednesday — consistent with his stance the day before, indicating they
were separate issues — but mentioned removing Cuba from the list of
states sponsors of terrorism.
“You can reverse a country’s status on that list, but the tremendous
damage to U.S. foreign policy cannot be undone,” he told the AP. “It has
been proven that this list is not a tool or instrument in the fight
against terrorism, but rather a brutal and mere tool of political
coercion against sovereign states.”
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Cuban and American flags fly in the wind outside the American
embassy in Havana, Cuba, Tuesday, Jan.14, 2025. (AP Photo/Ariel Ley)
The Cuban Observatory of Human Rights, one of the civil groups, said
that by 4 p.m. EST, 18 people had been released, including Barreto
Batista.
“At three in the morning they knocked," Barreto Batista told the AP
over the phone. "I was sleeping (in the cell) and they told me to
gather all my things, that I was free.”
She said that she and the eight men were warned it was not a pardon
or a forgiveness and that they had to be on good behavior or they
could be sent back to prison.
“I am at home with my mother," she said. “The whole family is
celebrating.”
In July 2021, thousands of Cubans took to the streets to protest
widespread power outages and shortages amid a severe economic
crisis. The government’s crackdown on the demonstrators, which
included arrests and detentions, sparked international criticism,
while Cuban officials blamed U.S. sanctions and a media campaign for
the unrest.
In November, another Cuban nongovernmental organization, Justice
11J, said that 554 people remained in custody in connection with the
protests.
Biden's intention to lift the U.S. designation of Cuba as a state
sponsor of terrorism is likely to be reversed as early as next week
after President-elect Donald Trump takes office and Secretary of
State-designate Marco Rubio assumes the position of America’s top
diplomat.
Rubio, whose family left Cuba in the 1950s before the communist
revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power, has long been a
proponent of sanctions on the communist island.
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