The young woman is under house arrest and cannot leave the country or travel between provinces without notifying State Security.

14ymedio, Madrid, March 26, 2026 – Cuban YouTuber and activist Anna Sofía Benítez Silvente, known on social media as Anna Bensi, went this Wednesday to the Alamar police unit to be interrogated by State Security in relation to the case opened against her mother, Caridad Silvente. The young woman left the appointment, however, charged with the same offense, that of “acts against personal and family privacy, one’s own image and voice, identity of another person and their data.”
“I am under house arrest, I cannot leave the country or travel between provinces without notifying them,” she said in a video published on Facebook hours after arriving home to relate her encounter with State Security.
Benítez Silvente said she had been at the police station for an hour, a detail that became known thanks to her friend, David Espinosa, who reported it to reassure the people who had shown solidarity with her, some even accompanying her as a sign of support. “Anna Sofía Benítez Silvente has just left the unit. 3:07 pm. God is in control!” he announced, before she could give more details from the calm of her home, although in the middle of a blackout.
Now without her lawyer present, an agent led her to another office where another colleague was in charge of thoroughly searching her in case she was carrying any device to record
“First I went with the lawyer to an office and right there they took my statement and charged me,” she explained, and added that the investigator handling her mother’s case and a lieutenant filling out the paperwork were in the room. Barely a couple of minutes outside, waiting, “They told me they wanted to talk with me” and now without her lawyer present, an agent led her to another office where another colleague was in charge of thoroughly searching her in case she was carrying any device to record.
“They checked my hair, I had to undo my hairstyle, take off my blouse, my pants, they touched my shoes…,” she recounts. However, they then limited themselves to returning her ID card. “And this was everything that happened today,” she says, before thanking those who are supporting not only her and her mother, but also a national cause.
Benítez Silvente’s mother, Caridad Silvente, is accused of having disseminated images of a Ministry of the Interior agent who continue reading
During the interrogation carried out on Silvente on March 12, she was also held responsible for allowing her daughter, Anna Bensi, to publish denunciations against the Government. She was threatened with a sentence of up to five years in prison. The agents called her a “bad mother” and accused her daughter of being “counterrevolutionary,” “conspiring,” and receiving orders from the United States. After that interrogation, Silvente was informed that she is under house arrest and cannot receive visitors. She was required to find a lawyer within five days for her criminal trial. She was also told that Anna Bensi would be summoned soon.
“If something happens to my mom or to me, it will be your fault,” Bensi expressed, in a message that summarizes not only her personal anguish, but also the defenselessness in which many citizens find themselves when they become targets of the political police.
The case against her mother is a form of intimidation to prevent her from continuing to express herself on social media, she maintains
In a live broadcast published this Tuesday by the influencer, the young woman had reported that the summons was signed by Lieutenant Colonel Eddy Cala, the investigator in charge of the case.
Bensi has questioned the legality of the procedure and has denounced irregularities in the summons itself, which, she says, was poorly written and did not precisely detail the reasons why she had to appear before the authorities. The case against her mother is a form of intimidation to prevent her from continuing to express herself on social media, she maintains.
Wednesday’s interrogation occurs in a context of growing repression against critical voices within the Island. Far from decreasing, surveillance, arbitrary summonses, threats, and restrictions on movement continue to be part of the daily life of activists, independent journalists, outspoken artists, and citizens who express dissent.
Translated by Regina Anavy
______________________
COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.


















