On 13 July 1994 at least 35 men, women and
children were lost at sea when the vessel on
which they and others were attempting to flee
Cuba sank some seven miles out from Havana. The
31 survivors were eventually picked up by coast
guards and taken to shore where the 20 male
survivors were detained. Several of the
survivors allege that their vessel sank after it
had been pursued and assaulted by three other
vessels, apparently acting under official
instructions, and that those on board were given
no opportunity to surrender. The Cuban
Government denied any responsibility for the
sinking of the tugboat or for the loss of life,
alleging that it was an accident caused by the
irresponsible actions of those on board.
However, Amnesty International has received
compelling evidence, including eyewitness
testimony from several of the survivors,
indicating that those on board the three
pursuing vessels employed excessive force
disproportionate to the actual situation and
seemed to be taking orders from a fourth vessel.
They allege that their pursuers deliberately
rammed the
“13 de Marzo” and undertook other
aggressive actions which deliberately put at
risk the lives of those on board, none of whom,
from the information so far available, even from
government sources, were armed or in a position
to seriously resist capture. If this was the
case, Amnesty International believes that those
who perished in the incident were the victims of
extrajudicial execution.
On 21 July 1994 Amnesty International called on
the Cuban authorities to conduct a full and
impartial investigation into the incident and to
make the findings public, and that if the
investigation revealed that any government
official or agent acting on their behalf
committed an offence, to bring them to justice
and to give them a fair trial. It also called
for the release of any survivors detained as a
result of the incident unless they were charged
with a recognized criminal offence and urged
that no reprisals be taken against those who
spoke out about what happened. Since then,
despite calls to do so from human rights
defenders inside Cuba and international human
rights bodies, the Cuban authorities have not
only failed to carry out an adequate
investigation of the incident but have also
continued to harass and intimidate those inside
Cuba who have sought to peacefully protest the
sinking of the
“13 de Marzo”
or commemorate the lives of those who died.
Context
It is important to describe the context in which
the sinking of the
“13 de Marzo”
took place. In order to leave the country,
either to emigrate or simply to travel and
return to Cuba, Cuban citizens have to obtain an
official exit permit. Those who seek permission
to emigrate have to be in possession of a visa
for another country and fulfill a series of
other requirements, including the payment of
certain fees. In practice, it is very difficult
for most Cubans to meet such conditions. Many
resort to trying to leave by illegal means,
usually by sea, often floating on homemade rafts
or inner tubes of tyres. Over the years many
people have reportedly perished trying to make
the 90-mile crossing to the United States over
the Straits of Florida. Sometimes, even if those
wishing to emigrate have fulfilled the necessary
conditions, the authorities arbitrarily refuse
to let them leave or give permission to some
family members and not others. Being caught
trying to leave illegally is punishable by
imprisonment or a fine but if violence is
employed, a more serious charge of “piracy” can
be brought.
The desire to emigrate is in itself seen by the
Cuban authorities as tantamount to a rejection
of the Cuban political systemSee
footnote 1 and those who seek to do
so are often labelled as
“counter-revolutionaries” or “traitors”. In the
two or three years leading up to the sinking of
the “13 de
Marzo”, when economic conditions in
Cuba had seriously deteriorated,
there had been a significant increase
in the number of Cubans attempting to leave Cuba
by sea to try to reach the United States which
had until that time had a policy of permitting
those Cubans who reached its territory to remain
in the USA. At the same time, despite having
agreed in 1984 to accept up to 20,000 Cubans who
sought to emigrate by legal means, the US
authorities had in practice reduced the number
of visas it granted to Cubans. The Cuban
Government therefore claimed that, by
withholding visas, the US authorities were
encouraging Cubans to resort to illegal means to
leave. They also accused them of inciting such
action via radio and television broadcasts
directed at Cuba by the US government- funded
Radio and TV Martí. Given the traditional
hostility that has existed between the Cuban and
US Governments since the Cuban revolution in
1959 which brought President Fidel Castro Ruz to
power, the argument over Cuban migration in
effect became yet another political battleground
between the two countries with those who were
seeking to leave Cuba caught as pawns in the
middle.
The sinking of the
“13 de Marzo”
increased the general level of discontent that
clearly already existed in Havana at the time
and sparked off further escape attempts as well
as anti-government protests. In the days that
followed, the Cuban authorities apparently took
a conscious decision to cease preventing illegal
departures and the numbers of people trying to
leave Cuba illegally by sea soared. In some
instances, large groups of people tried to
hi-jack public ferries and other vessels, in
some cases by violent means. On 19 August 1994,
in response to the exodus that ensued, the US
Government ordered the US Coast Guard to prevent
undocumented Cubans from reaching US territorial
waters. As a result, between 19 August and
mid-September 1994, some 32,000 Cubans were
intercepted by the US Coast Guard and taken to
the US naval base at Guantánamo Bay, CubaSee
footnote 2. On 9 September 1994, the
two governments announced that they had come to
an agreement on how to deal with migration
issues for the future. As part of the agreement,
the Cuban authorities said it would take
“effective measures in every way it can to
prevent unsafe departures, using mainly
persuasive methods”. For further information,
see “United
States/Cuba: “Rafters” - Pawns of Two
Governments”, AMR 51/86/94, October
1994.
It is important to note that the escape attempt
by those on board the
“13 de Marzo”
took place at a point when the Cuban authorities
were actively seeking to deter and prevent such
illegal departures. It is also relevant to point
out that it is not the first time, either before
or since, that Amnesty International has
received reports of apparently excessive force
being used by the Cuban authorities to prevent
illegal departures by sea where the lives of
unarmed civilians, often women and children,
appear to have been put at risk.
Accounts by survivors
[Victims: Estrella Suárez Esquivel, Miralis
Fernández Rodríguez and 12-year-old Eliecer
Suárez García ]
According to an account compiled by an
unofficial Cuban human rights group on the basis
of interviews carried out with some of the
survivors on the day after the sinking of the
“13 de Marzo”
took place, events took place as follows:
"The boat left [the port of Havana] at about
3.00am. About 45 minutes later, having advanced
nearly seven miles out to sea, they were
intercepted by another Japanese-made tugboat
which started to ram them in order to make them
capsize. Another tugboat soon appeared and,
taking over from the first one, continued doing
the same thing. All [the passengers] were
trapped between these two boats, which then
began to direct water at them with high-pressure
hoses.The force of this tore the clothes off the
women, knocked them down, and forced the
children out of their arms.
"The mothers screamed and implored the attackers
to stop directing the water hoses at them
because they might cause the young ones to
drown. The perpetrators continued using the
hoses against the citizens, including the
children, trying to drown them by suffocation.
Many of the men, women and children on board
were injured by the pressure of the water which
threw them against the bulwarks of the boat.
Seconds later, a third tugboat appeared and
attacked forcefully from behind, splitting the
boat in two since it was an old Second World war
boat which had been repaired and was called “13
de Marzo”.
"All those on board were submerged in the water
including those who had taken refuge in the
engine room where they were trying to hang on to
poles, ropes and whatever they could find. After
nearly an hour of battling in the open sea, the
other boats circled round the survivors,
creating a whirlpool so that they would drown.
As a result many disappeared into the sea and
lost their lives."
[Victims: Julia Caridad Ruiz with three-year-old
son, Angel René Abreu ]
The following are extracts from the testimony of
survivor
Janette Hernández Gutiérrez, now
living in the USA, which was provided to an
unofficial human rights group in Cuba in the
days immediately after the incident occurred:
"As we were leaving the bay, we saw two
tugboats at the mouth of the bay. As we left,
they also left and started directing jets of
water at us. Constantly. They would not stop,
even though they knew there were children on
board... the pressurized water jets were really
powerful. We were holding the children, afraid
that they would fall. The men were standing
behind us, afraid that we would fall. But so
that they would see that there were women and
children on board, we had to go out on deck, so
that they would be certain of that and would not
commit murder ... At no time did they shoot at
us neither did they at any time order us to halt
with the loudspeaker. They simply let us leave
the bay and attacked us seven miles out where
there are no witnesses... They sent one of the
tugboats, the biggest one, which was green with
a red line along it, behind us and it hit us
from the stern and broke our boat in half ...
When that happened the boat started to drift
because the captain... was forced into the sea
from the pressure of the water jets.... he
disappeared just like that and when Raúl saw
that we were drifting, he assumed responsibility
and ran upstairs..... By then we knew we were
going to sink, it was something I just knew, I
had a feeling they were going to kill us because
otherwise they would have stopped . Raúl stopped
the engine... and when they saw that Raúl had
stopped it, they did not forgive that or respect
what Raúl did. They sank us in the following
way: the tugboat which had split our stern went
ahead and split us from the prow. That meant
there was no way to keep the tugboat afloat, it
was sinking, because the weight was all in the
middle... But they did not throw us lifebelts or
try to help us in any way... Then a "griffin"
[coastguard vessel] arrived, it was the only one
which helped us by throwing us lifebelts but the
tugboats stood by doing nothing, they did not
help at all. Later a small speedboat arrived and
picked up about seven people..."
[Victims: Omar Rodríguez Suárez with
two-year-old daughter Sixdy Rodríguez Fernández
]
Amnesty International has received similar
accounts from interviews it has carried out with
other survivors who were eventually able to
leave Cuba during the August 1994 exodus (see
above). In September 1994, an Amnesty
International delegation visited the US Naval
Base at Guantánamo Bay, CubaSee
footnote 3, where thousands of Cubans
were in detention after being picked up by the
US Coast Guard while trying to reach the USA by
sea. One of the men interviewed by the
delegation was one of about five people in the
camps said to be among the 31 survivors of the
sinking of the "13
de Marzo" and who had subsequently
again tried to flee from Cuba. According to his
account of events on 13 July 1994, the
“13 de Marzo”
had already been detected by the authorities as
it was leaving the port of Havana and three
vessels, all also tugboats, started to pursue it
straightaway. However, they were able to
continue into open sea. The first pursuing
vessel began to direct jets of water at them.
Then two of the pursuing tugboats deliberately
rammed the
“13 de Marzo” while the third,
despite their protestations that there were
women and children on board, continued to
persistently direct jets of water into the hold.
Once the “13
de Marzo” started sinking, the other
three boats backed off but did not immediately
attempt to rescue those on board. He himself was
by this time in the water. At a certain point he
got the impression that orders were given to
pick them up. He was picked up by what he
described as the "least aggressive" of the three
vessels. He said that those on board the three
attacking vessels were dressed in civilian
clothes but he did not believe, as the Cuban
authorities alleged, that they were ordinary
dockworkers, especially as several of the crew
of one boat appeared to be suffering from
seasickness. He was arrested, along with the
other male survivors, and held at Villa Marista
for 13 days before being released into house
arrest. At the time he left Cuba, another
detainee,
Raúl Muñoz García, was still in
detention accused of being in charge of the
tugboat and organizer of the escape attempt.
However, he said that in fact Raúl Muñoz was
only second-in-command and that the man in
chargeSee
footnote 4 had drowned. Raúl Muñoz
was reportedly released into house arrest after
eight months in detention but is said to have
been subjected to police surveillance and
harassment ever since.
[Victim: eleven-year-old Yousel Pérez Tacaronte
]
Another survivor interviewed by Amnesty
International in the USA in May 1996,
Sergio Perodin
Pérez, said that their departure was
detected by the port authorities as they were
leaving the port and that passers by on shore
had also noticed what was happening. However,
the “13 de
Marzo” was allowed to continue on its
way for about seven miles. He pointed out that
one of the effects of everything inside the
tugboat being drenched with water from the
pressurized water jets was that their
communications equipment no longer worked and
they were unable to call for help. In fact, he
believes, from information that he and other
survivors were able to obtain from various
sources, including people working in the Port of
Havana, after the incident took place, that the
authorities had found out about the escape
attempt some time beforehand and were lying in
wait for them. At no point did the pursuing
vessels warn those on board what they were going
to do or give them any opportunity to give
themselves up. When a foreign cargo boat came
within some 800 metres of where the
“13 de Marzo”
was sinking, the vessels which were attacking it
temporarily suspended their activities. After he
and some 40 other people had been forced into
the water, the three attacking tugboats
surrounded them, causing a whirlpool. At one
point, he said he heard one of the occupants of
the attacking vessels say, “Let's see what you
are going to do now, you sons of whores”. A
coastguard vessel which had followed the
“13 de Marzo”
and the other three tugboats out of
the port, and which appeared to be directing
operations by radio, eventually picked him and
others up. However, rather than taking them
straight to shore for medical attention, the
boat continued sailing around for some six hours
until it was given the order to go to Jaimanitas
on the western outskirts of Havana, where they
were received by 50-60 Interior Ministry
officials. The survivors, who were brought to
land on two or three different vessels, were
desperate to know what had happened to the
others who were on board the
“13 de Marzo”.
When they asked the authorities who else had
survived, they were simply told that if they
could not see them, then the sharks had eaten
them. The women and children were allowed to go
home later that day but the men were handcuffed
and questioned until evening when they were
transferred to the State Security headquarters
at Villa Marista in Havana. For the first two
days, they were not allowed to sleep much and
had to sleep on the floor but once the women
survivors started speaking out about what had
happened, their treatment improved. He said that
the authorities tried by various means to
persuade them to change their story. In his
case, a psychologist was brought in to work with
him. Another of the survivors was reportedly
offered a job working with State Security
outside of Cuba which he refused to do.
Among the 20 male survivors arrested were:
Raúl Muñoz
García, Sergio Perodin Pérez, Modesto Almanza
Romero, Daniel González Hernández, Juan Gustavo
Martínez Gutiérrez, José Fabian Valdés,
Arquimides Ledreijo Gamboa, Román Lugo Martínez,
Fidel González, Eugenio Fuentes Díaz, Ivan
Prieto Suárez, Daniel Prieto Suárez
and Jorge
Luis Cuba Suárez. They were
reportedly detained at Villa Marista, with no
access to lawyers. All except Raúl Muñoz García,
who was detained for eight months (see above),
were held for approximately one month before
being released into house arrest. It is not
clear whether any formal charges were brought
against any of them. One female survivor,
María Victoria
García Suárez, who lost thirteen
relatives in the tragedy and who the day
afterwards made statements to foreign
journalists contradicting the official version,
was twice taken into custody for questioning in
the days immediately following the incident. She
is said to have been severely traumatized by
what happened and to have spent some time in the
Havana Psychiatric Hospital. She and other
survivors who have remained in Cuba have
reportedly been kept under police surveillance
and been subjected to limitations on their
freedom of movement. All have been repeatedly
warned not to speak out about what happened to
them.
The vessels which attacked the
“13 de Marzo”
were reportedly identified as belonging to the
Ministry of Transport and are called
“Polargo 2",
“Polargo 3" and
“Polargo 5".
According to survivors,
“Polargo 5"
was the vessel which acted most
aggressively towards them. The fourth vessel
which followed along behind them and which
appeared to be directing operations was believed
to belong to the Cuban Coast Guard, which is
part of the Ministry of the Interior.
The victims
Estimates of the number of victims have varied.
Most survivors concur that there were some 70-72
people on board the tugboat when it departed.
According to the Cuban Government, 32 people
drowned and 31 were rescued. However, an
investigation carried out by an independent
human rights group inside Cuba found that at
least 37 people were missing. So far Amnesty
International has received the names of 35
people who were lost at sea. Most came from four
areas of Havana - Cotorro, Guanabacoa, Marianao
and Arroyo Naranjo. Many were members of the
same family.
NAMES OF THOSE WHO DIED
Arroyo Naranjo:
Angel René ABREU Ruiz, 3
Jorge Arquimides LEBRIGIO Flores, 28
Julia Caridad RUIZ Blanco, 35
Cotorro:
Pilar
ALMANZA Romero, 30
Yaltamira ANAYA Carrasco, 22
Marta CARRASCO Tamayo, 45
Yuliana ENRIQUEZ Carranza, 23
Sindy RODRIGUEZ Fernández, 2
Manuel GAYOL, 58
Caridad LEYVA Tacoronte, 4
Reinaldo MARRERO, 48
Helen MARTINEZ Enríquez, 6 months
Marjolís MENDEZ Tacoronte, 17
Odalys MUÑOZ García, 21
José Carlos NIKEL Anaya, 3
Leonardo NOTARIO Góngora, 27
Yousel Eugenio PEREZ Tacoronte, 11
Yasse (or Yasser) PERODIN Almanza, 11
Marta Caridad TACORONTE Vega, 33
Guanabacoa:
Ernesto ALFONSO Loureiro, 25
Lissette María ALVAREZ Guerra, 24
Giselle (or Lisette) BORGES Alvarez, 4
Lázaro BORGES Briel, 34
Joel GARCIA Suárez, 24
Armando GONZALEZ Raíz (or Raizes), 50
Augusto Guillermo GUERRA Martínez, 45
Mario GUTIERREZ, 35
Elio Juan GUTIERREZ García, 10
Fidelio Ramel PRIETO Hernández, 50
Marianao:
Miralis FERNANDEZ Rodríguez, 27
Eduardo SUAREZ Esquivel, 35
Eliecer SUAREZ García, 11
Estrella SUAREZ Esquivel, 45
Yolindis RODRIGUEZ Rivero, 2
Omar RODRIGUEZ Suárez, 30
Government version of events
Conflicting reports of the incident appeared in
the Cuban media, which are entirely state-
controlled, some alleging that the “13 de Marzo”
sank simply because it was very old and not
seaworthy and others saying that it sank because
it had accidentally collided with the pursuing
vessels. On 14 July 1994, the day after the
tragedy, Granma, the official Communist Party
newspaper, in an article entitled “Capsized
Tugboat robbed by Anti-Social Elements”
described what happened as an “irresponsible act
of piracy promoted and stimulated by
counter-revolutionary radio stations, the most
reactionary elements of the [Cuban exile] nest
of maggots in Miami, and by the well-known
failure of the United States to abide by
migration agreements”. On 16 July 1994 it
published a note from the Ministry of the
Interior saying that the appropriate authorities
had investigated circumstances surrounding the
sinking of the tugboat and found that it had
taken place as a result of a collision between
the “13 de Marzo” and another tugboat which was
attempting to catch up with it. It said that
those involved in the escape plan had known that
the “13 de Marzo” had been leaking before its
departure and that they had behaved
irresponsibly by going ahead anyway. It admitted
that the manoeuvres of the three vessels
belonging to the Ministry of Transport in trying
to intercept it and prevent its highjacking had
provoked “the unfortunate accident” but said
that two coast guard units on patrol nearby
immediately rushed to the aid of the people on
board and that the three Transport Ministry
vessels also joined in the rescue effort. It
said that, given the conditions of navigation
and the force of the currents (Force 3) in the
early hours of the morning, only 31 people were
rescued alive. The rest of the persons belonging
to the group had been lost at sea and the
principal leader was being detained.
An article published in Granma on 23 July 1994
alleged that Fidencio Ramel Prieto Ramos, said
to be the organizer of the escape attempt, who
was on duty as operations officer of the Havana
port authority, stole the “13 de Marzo” after
knocking out the night watchman with a drug
which he had put in his drink. It claimed that
the boat, which was made of wood, had been built
in 1879, that it was known to leak and that too
many people were on board. It then went on to
cite statements supporting the official version
of events allegedly made by four of the male
survivors, who were at the time still in
detention without access to lawyers. From its
interviews with two of the male survivors (see
above), Amnesty International believes that
there is reason to believe that these statements
were made under duress. In one of the
statements, said to have been made by Raúl Múñoz
García [see above], he admitted trying to ram
one of the pursuing tugboats early on in the
chase. All four appeared to admit that it was
irresponsible of them to have attempted to
undertake the journey in the first place in such
a vessel.
he Cuban authorities have never made public any
further information relating to the
circumstances of the sinking of the “13 de
Marzo”. According to unofficial sources, a very
limited police investigation may have taken
place but was reportedly filed in the Havana
prosecutor's office, Fiscalía Provincial de la
Ciudad de la Habana. In response to requests by
family members and lawyers, the prosecutor's
office reportedly responded in mid-1995 that
there were no plans to initiate legal
proceedings in connection with the sinking of
the “13 de Marzo”. Relatives of the victims were
also told by the authorities that it had not
been possible to locate and recover the bodies
of the victims or the boat itself. It is not
clear whether any concerted effort was made by
the authorities to do so. However, from
unconfirmed reports some survivors have received
from people who were involved in the rescue,
they believe that some of the bodies may have
been located and disposed of or hidden by the
authorities.
Calls for investigation from within Cuba
On 19 July 1994, the Archbishop of Havana and
President of the Conference of Catholic Bishops
of Cuba, Monsignor Jaime Ortega Alamino,
expressed his sorrow for the loss of so many
lives and said that “the sinking of the vessel,
which was carrying women and children, and the
difficulties of the rescue of the survivors do
not appear to be in any way accidental. This
adds to the sorrow a feeling of astonishment and
a need for the facts to be clarified and
responsibilities to be established.. What can
lead a human being to set off on such risky
ventures except a certain degree of desperation
or despair? What can lead other human beings to
use such unusual force against their brothers
other than a violent mentality?”
On 10 July 1995, lawyer René Gómez Manzano, who
has faced problems from the authorities on
several occasions before and since then because
of his political views and his professional
activities in defence of political prisonersSee
footnote 5, wrote to the Minister of
Justice expressing his surprise that over a year
after the incident, the courts had not carried
out an investigation to determine how it had
happened. On 20 July 1995, a group of seven
other lawyers, including Dr Leonel Morejón
AlmagroSee
footnote 6, and two members of the
public also sent an open letter to the Minister
of Justice and the Attorney General requesting
that a criminal investigation be opened into the
events surrounding the sinking of the “13 de
Marzo”. Both letters questioned in particular
why no investigation had been opened under
article 184 of the Cuban Penal Code, “Offences
committed in the course of Rail, Air and
Maritime Traffic” which provides for the
punishment of anyone who causes an accident by
failing to abide by the relevant laws and
regulations. The second letter ended as follows:
“... until the suspicious deaths of the innocent
are clarified, there will be no light in our
country, or in our justice... There is no excuse
for silence, silence cannot be forgiven. Nothing
justifies crime, even [if it is carried out] in
the name of the Revolution. That reminds us of
when people have been killed in the name of
God... We are waiting for justice to act.” As
far as Amnesty International is aware, the
authorities did not respond to either of the
letters.
International condemnation of the incident
In October 1996 the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights of the Organization of American
States condemned the sinking of the tugboat
saying that there was clear evidence that it was
not an accident but “a premeditated and
intentional act”. It concluded that it
constituted a violation of the rights to life,
physical integrity, free movement and justice.
It recommended that the Cuban Government carry
out a full investigation and punish those
responsible, compensate the survivors and
relatives of the victims, and take steps to
recover the bodies and the wreck of the boat.
In 1996, in his report to the 52nd Session of
the UN Commission on Human RightsSee
footnote 7, the Special Rapporteur on
Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions
stated that he had transmitted allegations
concerning the case to the Cuban Government in
June 1995 and expressed deep concern that he had
not received a reply. He urged that the
allegations be properly investigated, the
perpetrators brought to justice and the victims'
families compensated. The UN Special Rapporteur
on Cuba, in his interim report to the UN General
Assembly dated 7 October 1996, also expressed
serious concern “about the fact that an event of
this magnitude, in which 37 people died, has not
been investigated”See
footnote 8.
Subsequent arrests and other violations relating
to the incident
In the days immediately following the tragedy,
the authorities attempted to prevent any protest
or public demonstration of grief. A mass for the
victims had to be cancelled and people wearing
black armbands as a sign of mourning were also
reportedly detained briefly. Relatives of the
victims were also reportedly prevented from
throwing flowers into the sea on the grounds
that that is only usually done for “martyrs of
the Revolution”. On 23 July 1994 Aida Rosa
Jiménez of the Movimiento de Madres Cubanas Por
la Solidaridad, Movement of Cuban Mothers for
Solidarity, which had called on Cuba women to
wear black or purple ribbons for three days as a
sign of mourning, was arrested at her home and
taken to State Security headquarters at Villa
Marista. She was reportedly told by officials
that it was because of her efforts to encourage
people to attend a mass in commemoration of the
victims of the tugboat sinking. Seven other
human rights activists, Nelson Torres Pulido,
Odilia Collazo Valdés, Oscar Gutiérrez, Lázaro
Rodríguez, Martha Losada, Horacio Casanova and
Nelida Vera Pérez, all members of the unofficial
Partido Pro Derechos Humanos en Cuba (PPDHC),
Party for Human Rights in Cuba, who were trying
to investigate the events, were also detained on
22 July 1994 and held for three days before
being released without charge.
In December 1994, a woman who lost her daughter,
her brother and two other relatives in the
incident made an appeal to international human
rights organizations and governments which
concluded as follows: “This crime cannot remain
unpunished. We who suffered their [the victims']
physical disappearance can only cry and be
silent. We keep a vigil by their photos with
Rapid Response BrigadesSee
footnote 9 standing by. We have been
warned not to put at risk the safety of those
who survived. Everything is clear, we have to
keep quiet. But you who are free to shout to the
world that incidents like this should not be
repeated must not forget this massacre... We
only ask for the remains of our loved ones and
that justice is done for this horrendous crime.”
In July 1995, at the time of the first
anniversary of the sinking of the "13 de Marzo",
an extensive police operation was reportedly
carried out in Havana to prevent any
commemorative activities from taking place and a
number of political and human rights activists
were briefly detained. A mass in commemoration
of the victims that was scheduled to take place
at the Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus was
cancelled by the authorities and the church was
closed.
On the second anniversary in 1996, the
authorities again took action to prevent
protests or activities commemorating the sinking
of the “13 de Marzo”. On 5 July 1996 Isabel del
Pino Sotolongo, president of an unofficial group
called Seguidores de Cristo Rey, Followers of
Christ the King, was reportedly arrested in a
Havana park where she was displaying the photos
of the victims of the tugboat sinking and
distributing leaflets containing quotes from the
Bible. She was released later that day but
warned that she was under investigation on
several charges. Aida Rosa Jiménez, who was
planning to hold a prayer meeting in a church on
13 July 1996, was told that she should pray at
home. She was warned that if she tried to go to
church that day, she would be arrested.
Conclusions
Given the grave accusations of the survivors,
the contradictory official accounts of the
incident and the failure of the Cuban
authorities to carry out a full and impartial
investigation and to make the findings public,
as well as the fact that those seeking such an
investigation or even simply to commemorate the
incident have faced intimidation and harassment,
Amnesty International believes that there are
serious reasons to doubt the official version of
events. While acknowledging that those on board
the “13 de Marzo” had committed a crime by
stealing the tugboat, there is no evidence to
suggest that they were armed or that they were
in a position to offer any serious resistance to
the pursuing vessels. Indeed, from many of the
survivors' accounts, it appears that their pleas
to surrender and to be rescued may have been
deliberately ignored. Amnesty International has
therefore concluded that at the very least the
force employed by the pursuing vessels to
prevent the departure of the “13 de Marzo” was
disproportionate to the nature of the crime,
especially taking into account the risk to the
lives of those on board the “13 de Marzo” who
included women and children. The Cuban
authorities have argued that those on board the
pursuing vessels were dock workers acting on
their own initiative and not government or law
enforcement officials. However, several of the
survivors have doubted this assertion and have
alleged that the whole operation appeared to be
coordinated and directed by radio from a coast
guard vessel. The Cuban coast guard service
falls under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of
the Interior. Amnesty International believes
that there is sufficient evidence to indicate
that it was an official operation and that, if
events occurred in the way described by several
of the survivors, those who died as a result of
the incident were victims of extrajudicial
execution.
Recommendations
Amnesty International is therefore making the
following recommendations to the Cuban
Government:
·
That a full and impartial investigation into
the sinking of the "13 de Marzo" tugboat be
carried out immediately, and that the findings
be made public.
·
That such an investigation be carried out
in accordance with international standards,
including the UN Principles on the Effective
Prevention and Investigation of Extra- Legal,
Arbitrary and Summary Executions.
·
That anyone identified as being responsible
for the loss of life be brought to justice in
accordance with international standards for a
fair trial.
·
That the families and dependents of the
victims be granted fair and adequate
compensation within a reasonable period of time.
·
That the relatives of the victims be fully
informed of what efforts were made to locate the
bodies of the victims and, if any were found,
what happened to the remains.
·
That survivors or relatives of the victims
be permitted to speak out about what happened
without fear of reprisals.
·
That no further reprisals be taken against
anyone who seeks to peacefully protest or
commemorate the sinking of the “13 de Marzo”.
·
That no one should be imprisoned for
attempting to leave the country illegally if
they have not committed any other recognizable
criminal offence.
That strict orders be issued to law
enforcement officials and agents acting on their
behalf to abide at all times by the UN Basic
Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by
Law Enforcement Officials.
Footnote: 1
The Cuban Constitution declares Cuba to be a
socialist state. Only one political party - the
Partido Comunista de Cuba (PCC), Cuban Communist
Party - is permitted to exist.
Footnote: 2
The USA maintains the naval base at Guantánamo
Bay on the mainland of Cuba under the terms of
an agreement reached in 1903 when the country
was under US occupation. The lease was renewed
in 1934 and although the current Cuban
Government, which came to power in 1959, objects
to the presence of the base on Cuban territory,
it has continued to remain there.
Footnote: 3
See footnote 2. Amnesty International has been
unable to conduct an investigation inside Cuba
itself because the Cuban authorities have not
permitted the organization to visit the country
to carry out research since 1988.
Footnote: 4
Fidelio Ramel Prieto Hernández, the former head
of operations at the Port of Havana as well as a
Communist Party official.
Footnote: 5
See “Cuba: Government Crackdown on Dissent”, AMR
25/14/96, April 1996 See “Cuba: Government
Crackdown on Dissent”, AMR 25/14/96, April 1996
Footnote: 6
Idem.
Footnote: 7
E/CN.4/1996/4
Footnote: 8
A/51/460, 7 October 1996
Footnote: 9
Government-organized groups of Communist Party
members, participation of which is supposed to
be voluntary, set up with the aim of “defending
the country, the Revolution and socialism in all
circumstances, by confronting and liquidating
any sign of counter-revolution or crime”,
wherever it might appear. Amnesty International
has received frequent reports of acts of
intimidation and even physical violence carried
out by such brigades against known dissidents.
See “Cuba: Silencing the Voices of Dissent”, AMR
25/26/92, December 1992 for further background.
Government-organized groups of Communist Party
members, participation of which is supposed to
be voluntary, set up with the aim of “defending
the country, the Revolution and socialism in all
circumstances, by confronting and liquidating
any sign of counter-revolution or crime”,
wherever it might appear. Amnesty International
has received frequent reports of acts of
intimidation and even physical violence carried
out by such brigades against known dissidents.
See “Cuba: Silencing the Voices of Dissent”, AMR
25/26/92, December 1992 for further background.
AI Index: AMR 25/13/97
Amnesty International July 1997