
Pedro Argüelles Morán, former director of the Cooperative of Independent Avileña Journalists (Cooperativa Avileña de Periodistas Independientes, CAPI), based in Ciego de Ávila, was released on 4 March 2011 and returned to his family home in central Cuba. He had served almost eight years of a 20-year sentence.
Argüelles, 63, was the last to be freed of the 35 writers and independent journalists and librarians who were arrested as part of a crackdown on alleged dissidents that began on 18 March 2003 and in which 75 people in total were detained and tried. All were sentenced during one-day trials held on 3/4 April 2003 under laws governing the protection of the Cuban state.
Argüelles has been allowed to remain in Cuba under a special parole programme, like journalists Iván Hernández Carrillo and Héctor Fernando Maseda Gutiérrez, who were released on 19 and 12 February 2011 respectively. The 18 writers and independent journalists and librarians freed between July and September 2010 under a deal brokered by the Catholic Church and the Spanish foreign ministry were all forced to accept exile in Spain (three have reportedly since relocated, two to the USA and one to Chile).
Local human rights activists have expressed concern that the special parole programme under which Argüelles, Hernández and Maseda have been freed will be used as a way to maintain control over political prisoners after their release. None of the freed ‘Black Spring’ writers have had their prison sentences lifted. We are therefore continuing to call for the release of the ‘Black Spring’
writers to be made unconditional, and for the release of independent journalist Albert Santiago Du Bouchet Hernández who has been imprisoned since April 2009 on a three-year prison sentence for “disrespect for authority”.
Pedro Argüelles Morán was an Honorary Member of English PEN.
Originally posted with the url: www.englishpen.org/writersinprison/writersinexile/pedroarguellesmoran/

