Document #1286235
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
A Chicago Tribune report describes
the Nueva Trova musical movement as follows:
Nueva Cancion, rooted in South America, and
Nueva Trova, originally from Cuba and heavily promoted by the
revolutionary government, were sister movements of Latin American
song in the 1970s and 1980s: folk-based, inclined toward indigenous
rhythms and instrumentation, often putting poetry to music, and
nearly always politically left (17 Mar. 1994).
The Website of Vicente Feliú, a
Nueva Trova member, states that the movement of the Nueva Trova was
shaped in 1972 by artists Pablo Milanés, Silvio
Rodríguez, Noel Nicola, Lázaro García and
Augusto Blanca (no date). According to the Website, Feliú
has been involved in the movement for 15 years and has occupied
many posts, including that of president.
According to a Washington Post
report, Milanés has been referred to as the "Bob Dylan of
Cuba" (6 Mar. 1979). The same report adds that Nueva Trova (new
song) is similar to American folk music of the 1960s. According to
a 9 September 1995 Billboard report, a concert by
Milanés and singer Victor Manuel was canceled in the port of
El Ferrol, in Spain. It was one of at least three concerts by
"so-called communists" to be canceled by municipal governments in
Spain during the summer of 1995 (ibid.). The same report states
that Milanés was a deputy in Cuba's National Assembly
(ibid.).
In a 12 June 1995 Reuters report,
Milanés was reported to have "again criticized" the Cuban
Culture Ministry for closing down the Pablo Milanés
Foundation, a non-governmental organization promoting Cuban and
Latin American culture founded in 1993. Milanés, also a
member of parliament, accused the ministry of being unable to cope
with the autonomy of the foundation (ibid.). However, despite the
accusation, Milanés reaffirmed his "unquestionable support
for the Cuban Revolution" (ibid.).
A 10 July 1997 PR Newswire report states
that Rodríguez, famous throughout Latin America and Spain,
was greeted with protests by Cuban exiles during an April 1997
concert in Puerto Rico because of his "public support of the Cuban
revolution and its leaders." The same report adds that
"ironically," in the past Rodríguez faced censorship in Cuba
because of the "political ambiguity" of his lyrics.
According to an 18 July 1997
Sun-Sentinel report, Rodríguez aired pro-Castro
opinions during a live interview show with Jaime Bayly on CBS
TeleNoticias on 16 July. In responding to a question by a member of
the Cuban American National Foundation, a Florida-based Cuban exile
group, about why Rodríguez did not sing about political
prisoners, the Cuban singer stated: "I believe that all of the
political prisoners in Cuba are in prison because of terrorist
activity...because of armed and aggressive actions" (ibid.).
Rodríguez also "defended" the Cuban government by saying
that the country's health care system and higher education system
compensated for Cuba's economic problems and food shortages
(ibid).
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum.
References
Billboard [Gloucester, Mass.].
9 September 1995. Howell Llewellyn. "A Disastrous Season for
Spain's Summer Concert Circuit." (NEXIS)
Chicago Tribune. 17 March 1994.
Achy Obejas. "Nueva Cancion, rooted in South America, and Nueva
Trova, originally from Cuba..." (NEXIS)
PR Newswire. 10 July 1997.
"Controversial Cuban Singer Silvio Rodríguez on 'En Directo
Con Jaime Bayly." (NEXIS)
Reuters. 12 June 1995. "Cuba's Milanes
Says He's Still a Revolutionary." (NEXIS)
Sun-Sentinel [Fort Lauderdale].
18 July 1997. David Cazares. "Cuban Singer's Radio Interview
Garners Attention; Silvio Rodríguez Airs Pro-Castro
Opinions." (NEXIS)
"Vicente Feliú." no date.
[Internet] http://www.guegue.com.ni/vincentefeliu/Home.htm
[Accessed 25 May 1998]
The Washington Post. 6 March
1979. Final Edition. Tom Zito. "They Boogied in Havana; the
Message: Rock Is Subversive, Even in Cuba." (NEXIS)
The following information on the
"dangerousness" laws of the Cuban Penal Code is additional to that
already found in the Documentation, Information and Research Branch
(DIRB) Question and Answer Series paper entitled: Cuba: The
Human Rights Situation of April 1996.
Amnesty International, Human Rights
Watch/Americas and the United Nations "Report on the situation of
human rights in Cuba, prepared by the Special Rapporteur" all
provide examples of how the dangerousness provisions of the Penal
Code have been applied to persons who cannot find work in Cuba (AI
Aug. 1997, 8; ibid. Sept. 1994; HRW/A Feb. 1994, 5; United Nations
Commission on Human Rights 11 Jan. 1995, 12)
Human Rights Watch/Americas' February 1994
paper entitled Stifling Dissent in the Midst of Crisis
reported that hundreds of people were arrested for so-called
"illegal economic activities," including cases where people had
been arrested for dangerousness for not working (vínculo
laboral) or for refusing to accept a job in agriculture (5).
In most of these cases, individuals were subjected to prison or
agricultural labour sentences, while others were simply fined and
released (ibid.).
Between August 1993 and September 1994,
Amnesty International documented many cases where people had been
detained and imprisoned for up to four years for dangerousness,
which is officially known as the "El Estado Peligroso y Las Medidas
de Seguridad" (The Dangerous State and Security Measures) under the
Penal Code (Sept. 1994). This report entitled Hundreds
Imprisoned for "Dangerousness" documented several cases where
people were imprisoned under dangerousness legislation for refusing
to work (ibid.). In some cases, individuals lost their jobs because
they were perceived as not supporting the government, and then were
accused by police of dangerousness for not working (ibid.). In this
Amnesty International report, the cases of Israel Mederos Sanchez,
a group of young people from San Miguel del Padro, Luis Felipe
Lorens Nodal and Hernando Duarte Montalvo are examples of the
application of the dangerousness laws to persons who are not
working. For more detailed information on the application of the
dangerousness law, please consult the above-mentioned Amnesty
International report available in all Regional Documentation
Centres.
The United Nations "Report on the situation
of human rights in Cuba, prepared by the Special Rapporteur" states
that according to reports received, cases of dangerousness have
included "acts of vandalism or social protest such as the
distribution of pamphlets or the painting of anti-Government
slogans on walls, not having an acceptable job, petty larceny,
throwing stones at commerical establishments, etc." (United Nations
Commission on Human Rights 11 Jan. 1995, 12).
Amnesty International's August 1997 report
entitled Cuba: Renewed Crackdown on Peaceful Government
Critics highlights the case of Pascual Escalona Naranjo, a
government critic arrested for dangerousness on the grounds that he
refused to get work (8). Following the arrest and release of
Escalona and his wife on 14/15 June 1997, Escalona was summoned by
police and told that he would be tried for dangerousness; when he
refused to sign the official warning against him, he was
re-arrested on 22 July 1997 (ibid.). He was charged with
dangerousness before a municipal court on the grounds that he
refused to work. However, Escalona maintained his position that his
inability to find work was because of the official orders against
him (ibid.). Escalona was sentenced to serve a one-year prison
sentence (ibid.).
More recent information on the application
to unemployed persons of the dangerousness laws in Cuba could not
be found among the sources consulted by the Research
Directorate.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum. Please find below the
list of additional sources consulted in researching this
Information Request.
References
Amnesty International. August 1997.
Cuba: Renewed Crackdown on Peaceful Government Critics.
(AI Index: AMR 25/29/97) London: Amnesty International.
_____. September 1994. Cuba:
Hundreds Imprisoned for "Dangerousness." [Internet]
http://www.amnesty.org/...1994/AMR/250194.AMR.txt
[Accessed 1 May 1998]
Human Rights Watch/Americas. February
1994. Vol. 6, No. 2. Cuba: Stifling Dissent in the Midst of
Crisis. New York: Human Rights Watch.
United Nations Commission on Human
Rights. 11 January 1995. (E/CN.4/1995/52). Report on the
Situation of Human Rights in Cuba, Prepared by the Special
Rapporteur, Mr. Carl-Johan Groth, in accordance with Commission
Resolution 1994/71.
Additional Sources Consulted
Cuba: New Cases of Prisoners of Conscience and Possible Prisoners of Conscience.
INS Resource Center. June 1995.Cuba: Human Rights in Cuba.
Journal of Interamerican Studies and
World Affairs [Miami]. 1997-1998.
Latinamerica Press [Lima].
1997-1998.
Latin American Regional Reports:
Caribbean & Central America Report [London].
1997-1998.
Electronic sources: IRB Databases,
Global News Bank, LEXIS/NEXIS, Internet, REFWORLD (UNHCR database),
World News Connection (WNC).