Freedom House - Click to return to the Home Page
About UsAdvocacyActionAnalysisNewsroomSupport
In the News | Press Releases | Newsletter | Media Sign-Up
Freedom House content available in:


Stand with us

Around the World

Egypt
Three top leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s most powerful opposition group, were arrested as a part of the government’s ongoing crackdown against the group following their appointment of new leadership. Read more on Egypt at Freedom in the World 2009: Egypt

Ukraine
Opposition leader Viktor Yanukovich defeated Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko by nearly three percentage points in Ukraine’s runoff election, bringing to power the man who attempted to steal the 2004 presidential election. Read more on Ukraine at Freedom in the World 2009: Ukraine

Iran
Ignoring calls for more severe sanctions against it, Iran announced that it would begin enriching uranium to a higher level of purity for use in a medical reactor, increasing tensions with the US and other countries. Read more on Iran at Freedom in the World 2009: Iran

Nigeria
The Nigerian Parliament voted to install Vice President Goodluck Jonathan as acting president, filling a dangerous power vacuum created by the medically-related absence of President Umaru Yar’Adua since November. Read more on Nigeria at Freedom in the World 2009: Nigeria

Publications

Freedom in the World
Freedom of the Press
Nations in Transit
Countries at the Crossroads
Women's Rights Survey
Freedom on the Net
Special Reports

Events

Search Freedom House

Search Help
Related Websites

Debate

Democracy Web

Derecho a Voz

Freedom House Europe

Governance Blog

Gozaar

OSCE Monitor

Peace in the Caucasus

Undermining Democracy

Voice of Freedom

Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Laura Ingalls 

Obama Administration Should Pursue New Approach to Promote Democracy in Cuba

Washington
January 7, 2009

El comunicado de prensa en español.

The United States should reinvigorate efforts to advance human rights and democracy in Cuba, Freedom House said today.  One key element of a strengthened policy would be the lifting of U.S. legal restrictions on American citizen travel to the island.

Cuba has consistently received either the lowest or second-lowest ratings on political rights and civil liberties by Freedom House since it first began publishing the global Freedom in the World survey in 1972.  Cuba’s citizens are denied most fundamental rights, including the right to elect their government, participate in political opposition, freely express their views, demonstrate, participate in trade unions, own property, travel, or access information free of government control.  Since Raul Castro succeeded his brother as leader of Cuba, some nominal reforms have been announced, though their impact on the lives of Cubans remains negligible.

“Cuba remains one of the most repressive countries in the world,” said Jennifer Windsor, executive director of Freedom House.  “It is well past time to reassess a policy that impedes the ability of American citizens to freely interact with Cubans on a large scale and thus expose them to unfettered information about the outside world.  We call on the incoming administration of Barack Obama to reexamine the embargo and to immediately lift the restrictions on remittances and travel to and from the island.”

The United States first began introducing economic sanctions against Cuba in 1960 following that government’s seizure without compensation of U.S. assets on the island.  Current U.S. sanctions, which strictly limit trade with Cuba to cash-only sales of U.S. farm products and medical supplies, are unique to all other U.S. sanction policies in that they also prohibit U.S. citizens from traveling to Cuba unless they obtain a U.S. government waiver.  

“While the Bush administration expanded American support for democracy activists in Cuba, U.S. policy would be even more effective if Americans were allowed to engage more freely with Cuban counterparts,” Windsor continued.  “Those countries that have moved from dictatorship to democracy in recent decades have done so in large part because of the movement of people and ideas across borders.”

The United States does not impose similarly restrictive travel sanctions on Americans to other regimes that receive Freedom House’s lowest freedom ratings, including Burma, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan.

For more information on Cuba see:

Freedom in the World 2008:  Cuba
Freedom of the Press 2008:  Cuba
Change in Cuba: How Citizens View Their Country's Future

Freedom House, an independent nongovernmental organization that supports the expansion of freedom in the world, has been monitoring political rights and civil liberties in Cuba since 1972.

Freedom matters.
Freedom House makes a difference.
www.freedomhouse.org

###

 
 
–END–