- Oscar Elías Biscet
Oscar Elías Biscet González (born
July 20 ,1961 inHavana ,Cuba ), is a medical professional, a prominentChristian anti-abortion activist, and a noted advocate forhuman right s and democratic freedoms in Cuba, his native country. He is also the founder of theLawton Foundation , a non-governmental group started in 1997 which describes itself as promoting "the study, defense, and denunciation of human rights violations inside Cuba and wherever the rights and liberties of human beings are disregarded". [http://www.lawtonfoundation.com/, accessedAugust 15 ,2007 .]Dr. Biscet is serving a 25-year prison sentence in Cuba for allegedly committing crimes against the sovereignty and the integrity of the Cuban territory. Despite appeals from the United Nations, foreign governments, and international human rights organizations, Cuba has refused to release Dr. Biscet. In recognition of his advocacy efforts for human rights and democracy in Cuba,
U.S. President George W. Bush bestowed upon Dr. Biscet the distinct honor of receiving thePresidential Medal of Freedom in 2007. [ [http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/10/20071029.html White House Press Release Annoucing 2007 Presidential Medal of Freedom winners] ]Beginnings
Biscet received a degree in
medicine in 1985; the following year he initiated protests which led to his immediate suspension. Starting in 1988, Biscet revealed his political tension with thecommunist regime through speech. The Cuban government in 1994 officially opened a case file on Biscet, labeling him a counter-revolutionary and "dangerous". In 1997, Biscet founded the [http://www.lawtonfoundation.com/ Lawton Foundation] .Political and philosophical background
Henry David Thoreau ,Mohandas Gandhi , andMartin Luther King, Jr are major influences in Biscet's writing and motivation. [Nordlinger, Jay (06/11/2001). Who cares about Cuba?, "National Review", v.53 #11. p.33. Accessed onAugust 15 ,2007 .] Others from whom Biscet has taken inspiration areAbraham Lincoln ,Thomas Jefferson ,José Martí , andFrederick Douglass . He is a strong believer in ademocratic government [CUBA: NEWLY FORMED DISSIDENT COALITION COMPETES WITH VARELA PROJECT SUPPORTERS FOR CONTROL OF INTERNAL OPPOSITION, "NotiCen: Central American & Caribbean Affairs", Latin America DataBase, University of New Mexico (11/14/2002). Accessed onAugust 15 ,2007 .] and has advocatedpro-life politics.Expulsion from the National Health Service
Dr. Biscet was expelled from the Cuban National Health System in February 1998 because of his activism. Biscet's wife, Elsa Morejón was also expelled from nursing (her profession) because of her husband's activities; she now depends on charity and her family for survival.Fact|date=August 2008
1999 arrest
In August 1999, Biscet, along with two dozen other dissidents, were detained by Cuban police for organizing meetings in Havana and
Matanzas . Police seized him inPedro Betancourt and took him toJovellanos for questioning. He claimed that while in custody, the police tortured him by beating, kicking, stripping, and burning him. The government then threatened to detain him longer if he continued promoting his version of pro-democratic activities in Cuba. He was released onAugust 17 ,1999 . Later in 1999, he was sent back in prison for a three-year sentence for dishonoring a national symbol, public disorder, and instigating to commit crime, after having protested Cuba's lack of freedom by showing the Cuban flag upside down. He was released from a high-security prison in theHolguín province after having served his entire three-year sentence behind bars. [THE WORLD; IN BRIEF/ CUBA; POLITICAL PRISONER FREED AFTER SERVING 3 YEARS, "Los Angeles Times". page A.4. (November 1 ,2002 ). Accessed onAugust 15 ,2007 .]2002 arrest
One month after recovering his liberty, on
December 6 ,2002 , Biscet was arrested in a private house with 11 other dissidents while discussing a petition drive and human rights. [THE WORLD; IN BRIEF/ CUBA; PROMINENT DISSIDENT REARRESTED, WIFE SAYS, "Los Angeles Times", page: A4. (12-08-2002) Accessed onAugust 15 ,2007 .] Dr. Biscet's wife later said the activists "were beaten and violently arrested". During their removal from the house they shouted "Long live human rights" and "Freedom forpolitical prisoners ".Biscet was one of the 75 dissidents imprisoned in 2003 by the Cuban authorities for his association with the head of the
US Interests Section in Havana ,James Cason . He was given a 25-year sentence for "disorderly conduct" and "counter-revolutionary activities", he is currently being held atCombinado del Este Prison in Havana, where he is generally not allowed outside visitors, including medical practitioners and clergy, under conditions described as "wretched". [The Myth of Cuban Health Care, "National Review", (07-30-2007) AccessedAugust 15 ,2007 .] He had previously been imprisoned in the "Cinco Y Medio" prison inPinar del Río . A replica of his cell while there was displayed at the residence of the head of the U.S. national interests section, James Cason. (Photo at right.) [http://www.state.gov/p/wha/rls/rm/37104.htm]In 2003, in response to a petition concerning Dr. Biscet and other Cuban prisoners of conscience, the
United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention determined that Dr. Biscet is being held in violation of Articles 9, 10, 19, 20, and 21 of theUniversal Declaration of Human Rights and called for his immediate release.On
September 1 ,2005 , in response to an Urgent Action Appeal filed by [http://www.freedom-now.org/Oscar.php Freedom Now] on behalf of Dr. Biscet, the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, the Special Rapporteur on the Question of Torture, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Human Rights Defenders, and the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression and Association issued a joint urgent appeal to the Government of the Republic of Cuba calling again for Dr. Biscet's immediate release.Campaign to release
[http://www.freedom-now.org/Oscar.php Freedom Now] , a non-profit organization located in Washington, D.C., was retained in 2005 to assist in obtaining Dr. Biscet's release from prison. On
September 1 ,2005 , in response to an Urgent Action Appeal filed by Freedom Now on Dr. Biscet's behalf, the United Nations called on the Government of the Republic of Cuba to immediately release Dr. Biscet. Despite these appeals, Dr. Biscet remains imprisoned. Freedom Now has engaged in extensive outreach efforts to raise international awareness of his case and continues to advocate for his immediate release.Nat Hentoff has been one of the chief advocates for Dr. Biscet in the United States, penning numerous pleas in his syndicated and "Village Voice " column calling for his release, and highlighting his plight within the Cuban criminal justice system.U.S. Congressman
Lincoln Diaz-Balart visitedUkraine in December 2005, and there met with PresidentViktor Yushchenko . Diaz-Balart told Yushchenko, "This Cuban physician was not able to give me his message personally because he is a political prisoner who at this moment suffers in solitary confinement in a cold, damp underground dungeon simply for believing in democracy and human rights. I received his message from his wife, Ms. Elsa Morejón. Dr. Biscet sends you and all of your colleagues of theOrange Revolution , for freedom anddemocracy in Ukraine, a message of friendship and solidarity. He also expresses his deep gratitude, on behalf of all the political prisoners in Cuba, for your vote and your support at theUnited Nations Human Rights Commission inGeneva for human rights in Cuba."When Diaz-Balart gave this message to Yushchenko, a
Cuban American human rights group, "Mothers and Women Against Repression", gave the president of Ukraine a photograph of Biscet and three other political prisoners. Yuschenko thanked them and replied, "I will never forget this message, this gesture of friendship. I will never forget the Cuban political prisoners."A [http://www.free-biscet.org webpage] exists since 1999 that is dedicated to securing the release of Dr. Biscet from jail and promulgating his ideas. It includes news and columns about Dr. Biscet as well as writings from Dr. Biscet smuggled out from him in prison.
ee also
*
Human Rights in Cuba
*Amnesty International
*Politics of Cuba
*Opposition to Fidel Castro References
External links
* [http://www.myspace.com/biscet Dr. Oscar Elías Biscet González] Myspace site (with audio and video of Dr. Biscet)
* [http://www.freedom-now.org/Oscar.php Freedom Now Background on Dr. Biscet]
* [http://www.lawtonfoundation.com/ Lawton Foundation]
* [http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=ZmIyNGU5MWE4NTQxNjc0N2NiODBlMTM4Y2Y3ODU5YTg= Honoring Biscet: A Unique Fight For Freedom Deserves Recognition]
* [http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/media/hrd/2007/alert/319/ On Fourth Anniversary of Clampdown, Rights Group Calls for Release of Prisoner]
* [http://www.free-biscet.org Free Dr. Biscet]
* [http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAMR250102002?open&of=ENG-CUB Release: Dr Oscar Elías Biscet González Cuba] Amnesty International background on Osar Elias Biscet
* [http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/defenders/hrd_cuba/alert120705_biscet.htm Protest Worsening Prison Conditions For Ill Cuban Activist]
* [http://www.free-biscet.org/biscetarticles/2005/Castro%20Black%20Prisoner.htm Castro's Black Prisoner: A follower of Martin Luther King and Gandhi in Fidel's custody for 22 more years] Column by Nat Hentoff
* [http://www.free-biscet.org/biscetarticles/newest%20repression%204-7-03/two%20paths.htm Two Paths?] Letter released by Dr. Biscet from the Provincial Prison of Pinar Del Rio through his wife, Elsa Morejon
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