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Cuban Teenagers Who Protested Communism In Streets Of Havana To Be Tried As Adults

A man waves a Cuban flag during a demonstration against the government of Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel in Havana, on July 11, 2021. - Thousands of Cubans took part in rare protests Sunday against the communist government, marching through a town chanting "Down with the dictatorship" and "We want liberty." (Photo by ADALBERTO ROQUE / AFP) (Photo by ADALBERTO ROQUE/AFP via Getty Images)

HAVANA — Among those being charged are 55 teenagers, ages 16 to 18, who are being tried as adults. Human rights groups have said the crackdown shows how Cuba’s judicial system is used to crush dissent.

The Cuban government said on Tuesday that some 790 people were being charged for sedition, public disorder and other crimes, after they took part in rare protests last year.

Among those being tried are 55 teenagers from the ages of 16 to 18, of which 28 are already in custody. Under Cuban criminal law, anyone over the age of 16 is considered an adult.

Many of the accused are have been in custody since the protests, leaving family members (pictured) worried

Cuba’s prosecutor’s office also said 27 children under 16 took part in the protests and had been disciplined, with 10 sent to “comprehensive training and behavioral schools” and the other 17 given “personalized attention in their school.”

Human rights groups have said the clampdown shows how Cuba’s judicial system is routinely used to crush dissent. But authorities claim that US-based opposition groups are responsible for fomenting unrest through social media.

What were the Cuba protests?

Cubans took to the streets in July of last year, in a rare show of public discontent, to protest blackouts, economic hardship and the tightly-controlled political system. They were the biggest demonstrations in decades in a nation where freedom of assembly is heavily restricted.

Calls for more protests were repeated in the weeks and months following the civil uprising. A group of artists called Archipelago, led by Yunior Garcia Aguilera, tried to organize the protests into a movement. But in November, a heavy crackdown prevented the assembly and Garcia Aguilera abruptly left the country.

The US Embassy in Havana criticized the Cuban government for “disproportionate sentences against peaceful and innocent youth.”

“They cannot crush the people’s demands for a better future,” the Embassy wrote on Twitter.

How many convictions have there been already?

At least 39 protesters will face trial this week and could be sentenced to up to 26 years in prison, the Justicia 11J, a human rights group that monitors the cases, said on Monday.

The attorney general’s office said the state was levying charges in conjunction with the level of violence each individual demonstrated. These acts included protesters throwing stones at hospitals, gasoline stations and other facilities, as well as looting.

“The public prosecutor’s office has received… 117 preparatory files relating to the most serious acts, with 790 people indited for acts of vandalism against authorities, people and assets, as well as serious disturbances of order,” the office said in a statement published in official newspaper Granma.

Some 172 have already been convicted and sentenced, according to the attorney general’s office.

https://www.dw.com/en/cuba-charges-hundreds-of-people-over-anti-government-demos/a-60553907

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