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Opposition Leader Ferrer Leaves Cuba For US Exile

Opposition leader Ferrer leaves Cuba for US exile: ministry
Source: Video Screenshot

Cuban dissident Jose Daniel Ferrer was freed from prison Monday and put on a plane to the United States where he will live in exile with his family, officials and relatives said.

Ferrer, who has been imprisoned multiple times as the long-term leader of the island’s pro-democracy movement, announced this month he had opted for exile after enduring “torture” and “humiliation” behind bars.

In a letter from prison, the 55-year-old said that since he was reimprisoned in April after being briefly freed under a deal with former US president Joe Biden, “the cruelty of the dictatorship towards me has known no bounds.”

He cited “blows, torture, humiliation, threats and extreme conditions” in prison, including “the theft of food and hygiene products.”

Ferrer said he took the difficult decision to leave given threats that his wife would also be imprisoned and his young son sent to an institution for juvenile offenders.

The foreign ministry in Havana said in a statement Ferrer and members of his family left the country for the United States Monday following “a formal request from that country’s government and the express acceptance” of the dissident.

His sister Ana Belkis Ferrer told AFP by telephone the opposition leader had “finally been exiled, thank God,” adding his family was “very happy despite the tension of the last days.”

Ferrer said in his letter he would leave Cuba “with my dignity and honor intact, and not for long.”

His departure deals a blow to the opposition movement in Cuba, in the throes of its worst economic crisis in decades and a mass exodus of young people, mainly to the United States.

Ferrer, founder of the Patriotic Union of Cuba (UNPACU) — one of the most active opposition organizations in the one-party state — had for years resisted pressure to go into exile to avoid prison.

He was the most high-profile of a group of prisoners released in January under a landmark deal struck with Biden in exchange for Washington removing Cuba from a list of terrorism sponsors.

But he was sent back to prison in April after Biden’s successor, Donald Trump, slapped Cuba back on the list.

Ferrer has been in and out of prison since March 2003, when he and 74 other opposition members were arrested in a three-day period of repression known as Cuba’s “Black Spring.”

He was released in 2011 but sent back to prison in 2021 following a crackdown on rare anti-government street protests that rattled the communist authorities.

The repression that followed silenced many critical voices and left the opposition in disarray.

During his brief spell of freedom this year, Ferrer had defied the authorities by criticizing Cuba’s leadership on social media.

He also met the head of the US diplomatic mission in Cuba, Mike Hammer, at his home in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba.

In his letter, he said “only the United States… truly stands in solidarity with the peaceful opposition and the Cuban people” — an implicit rebuke of the EU, which has angered dissidents by maintaining a political and cooperation agreement with Cuba.

Ferrer was transferred directly from the prison of Mar Verde in Cuba’s south to the international airport of Santiago de Cuba, where he was met by his wife Nelva Ortega and their son Daniel Jose, two daughters and his ex-wife — all of whom will travel with him to Miami.

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AFP

Agence France-Presse (AFP) is a French international news agency headquartered in Paris, France. Founded in 1835 as Havas, it is the world's oldest news agency.

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