“The Man With the Flag” Marks Five Months Detention

Daniel Llorente has been detained for five months since being arrested during the May 1 parade in Havana. (Courtesy)

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Luz Escobar, Havana, 1 October 2017 — To avoid losing his sanity, Daniel Llorente sweeps the floor of the psychiatric hospital in Havana with a broom. Llorente trained in automotive mechanics in East Germany, and five months ago the activist was arrested while waving the American flag in the May Day parade in the Plaza of the Revolution. Even today, neither the court nor the doctors dare to confirm the date on which he will be released.

“Cleaning allows me to occupy my mind with something,” comments the “man with the flag” about the work routine that he performs in the Commander Eduardo Bernabé Ordaz Hospital, known as Mazorra. “They do not let me leave this small area or throw out the garbage,” he laments. The spontaneous activist fears for his safety in the Giralt room, intended for the convicted, and where he says he has seen “everything.” continue reading

After an onerous arrest in front of the platform where Raul Castro was waiting for the workers’ parade, Llorente spent a month in the detention center known as 100 and Aldabó. On May 30 of this year he was transferred to the psychiatric hospital under an alleged “post-criminal measure” issued by a court and is awaiting trial.

His only way to communicate with the press has been by phone. His son, Eliezer Llorente, visits the hospital twice a week and has become his only contact with the world.

“They tell me here that my situation is in on ‘stand by’ because my case is being reviewed,” he tells 14ymedio. So far Llorente has not been accused of any crime and claims to have signed a document where he was exonerated of charges of “public disorder and resistance” for the May 1 incident.

The “independent opponent” promotes the diplomatic rapprochement between Cuba and the United States, but in recent weeks relations between Washington and Havana have gone downhill. This Friday the administration of Donald Trump announced the indefinite suspension of visas from the US embassy in Havana and the exit of 60% of the personnel.

It is bad news for Llorente, who asked last June to “be immediately expatriated” to the US, a demand driven by his desire to live in the country he considers “the greatest defender of human rights, hope, freedom, justice, brotherhood and the pursuit of happiness.”

He had already shown his sympathy for the nation of the north in May of 2016 when he made a similar protest to celebrate the arrival of the Adonia Cruise Line to Havana. At that time he was also arrested and detained for 24 hours.

On his hands, Daniel Llorente has tattooed the flags of Cuba and the United States. (Courtesy)

Although the US government denounced his latest detention, the case has been losing its prominence in the media as other priorities have displaced it, such as the acoustic attack on dozens of US diplomats.

More than two months ago, the doctor who attends Llorente announced that he could leave the psychiatric center on weekends. The news filled this man who worked as a private taxi driver before his arrest with enthusiasm. Shortly afterward, the psychiatrist told him that “these people” warned her not to give him a pass, a reference to State Security.

The specialist has assured Llorente that he does not suffer a mental illness and there is no reason to keep him hospitalized. Neither has he received any therapy or drugs for his alleged psychiatric disorder.

In an attempt to assert his rights Llorente has held several hunger strikes in the hospital and has written letters to political and religious leaders to denounce a situation that he calls “unjust.”

For the moment and until the hospital and the court agree, Llorente seems trapped in the script of a horror film. “All it takes is a hospital paper that says I’m fine to be able to dictate the end of this [detention] measure,” he says. While anxiously awaiting this document, he dedicates himself to sweeping the floor of the psychiatric hospital in Havana.

US Suspends Issuing Of Visas In Havana And Withdraws 60% Of Its Embassy Staff


Note: Our apologies for not having a subtitled version of this video

EFE / 14ymedio, Havana, 29 September 2017 — On Friday, the United States suspended indefinitely the issuance of visas to Cubans from its embassy in Havana and asked Americans not to travel to Cuba, insisting that it can not guarantee their security after the “attacks” suffered by at least 21 Americans stationed in the Island.

“Routine visa operations are suspended indefinitely,” at the US embassy in Havana, a senior State Department official, who asked to remain anonymous, told reporters.

Another spokeswoman for the State Department said that the family reunification program will also be affected, as the issuance of immigrant and nonimmigrant visas will be suspended.

The announcement by the US government has caught both Cubans living on the island and those living abroad by surprise. “No one understands what is happening,” says Adrián Núñez, a Cuban who arrived in Miami only two years ago and was engaged in the process to apply for a visa for his mother who lives in Cuba. continue reading

“We are looking at the possibility that people will be able to apply for visas at the embassy or consulates outside Cuba in other countries, but we have not made the final preparations yet,” said the State Department official.

The measure is a consequence of the State Department’s decision to withdraw all of its non-essential personnel from its embassy in Cuba, which accounts for “more than half” of its officials there, in response to alleged “acoustic” attacks on some of its diplomats on the island, for which the responsible party or parties are still unknown.

“Given that the safety of our personnel is at risk and that we can not identify the cause of the attacks, we believe that US citizens could also be at risk and warn them not to travel to Cuba,” said the official, who said some the attacks have occurred in hotels.

Despite this measure, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Friday that the United States will continue to work with the Cuban government in the investigation into the “attacks of unknown nature” suffered by its diplomats in Havana after announcing the withdrawal of more than half of its personnel in Cuba.

“Cuba has told us that it will continue to investigate these attacks, and we will continue to cooperate with them in this effort,” Tillerson said in a statement.

However, on Friday the Cuban government called the decision of the US administration “precipitous” and Josefina Vidal, Director General of the Department of the United States at the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs told the official media that the decision will affect the bilateral relationship, but said at the same time the Cuban Government will continue to engage in “active cooperation between the authorities of both countries.”

“For full clarification of the facts, it will be essential to have and to be able to count on the participation and effective involvement of the US authorities,” said Vidal, who broke the silence that the Cuban authorities maintained throughout the day in response to the decision announced by the US Department of State.

According to Tillerson, the decision to reduce the presence of officials in Havana has been taken to ensure the safety of the personnel, while maintaining that diplomatic relations with Cuba and the work done by the United States on the island will continue to be guided by the national security interests and foreign policy of the United States.

“Until the Cuban government can guarantee the safety of our diplomats in Cuba, our embassy will be reduced to emergency personnel, to minimize the number of diplomats who risk being exposed” to possible attacks, said the diplomatic chief.

Due to the reduction of personnel, the services provided by the US embassy in Havana will be limited to those that are “urgent,” according to the US administration.

The State Department has also decided to limit the travel of its officials to Cuba to “those involved in the investigation” of “attacks” on diplomatic personnel.

“The United States will not send official delegations to Cuba or schedule bilateral meetings in Cuba at the moment,” said the official, who added that meetings with the Cuban government could be scheduled in the United States.

Those measures will remain “until Cuba can guarantee the safety of US personnel” on the island, he added.

The United States does not directly blame the events on the Cuban government, at least for the moment, but it does believe that it is the responsibility of the executive, Raúl Castro, “to take all appropriate steps to prevent attacks” on US diplomats on the island.

For October 1st*: A Golden Oldie… Because, Why Not?

The [coma-andante] walking coma, wants me to work
El coma andante, quiere que yo trabaje

Paying me a miserable salary
Pagándome un salario miserable

The walking coma wants me to applaud
El coma andante quiere que yo lo aplauda

After he talks his delirious shit
después de hablar su mierda delirante

No walking coma
No coma andante,

Don’t you eat this dick, walking coma
no coma uste´ esa pinga coma andante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

If you want me to work give me some money
Si quiere que trabaje pasme un varo por delante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

You are a tyrant and there’s no one who can stand you
Usted es un tirano y no hay pueblo que lo aguante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

Walking coma, you hold elections
El coma andante, hace unas elecciones

that you invented to stay in power
que las inventó el pa´ perpetuarse

Walking coma, you want me to go and vote
El coma andante quiere que vaya y vote

To keep fucking myself over
para el seguir jodiendome bastante

No walking coma
No coma andante,

Don’t you eat this dick, walking coma
no coma uste´ esa pinga coma andante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

If you want me to vote give me a boat so I can leave
Si quiere que yo vote ponga un barco pa´ pirarme

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

You and your brothers cantankerous old fools
Usted y sus hermanos puros viejos petulantes

Don’t eat so much dick, walking coma
No coma tanta pinga coma andante

No, no… No coma tanta pinga
No, no… coma andante

No, no… No coma tanta pinga
No, no… coma andante

*The birthday of Communist China (68 today) and a lot of other things and people.