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By Nelson Acosta
HAVANA |
Tue Aug 30, 2011 8:21pm EDT
HAVANA (Reuters) - Leaders of the dissident group Ladies in White asked the Catholic Church on Tuesday to intervene with the Cuban government to end what they described as violent acts against them and other human rights activists.
They said government supporters had recently roughed up members of the group in Havana and a newly formed chapter in the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba and had given similar treatment to other dissidents.
Laura Pollan and Berta Soler told reporters they met with Church officials, but not Church leader Cardinal Jaime Ortega as planned because he was tired after returning from a trip.
"We asked the Catholic Church, which is our mediator, to end the harassment and the beatings of the Ladies in White ... and human rights activists," Soler said after the two emerged from the meeting at the Church's headquarters in Havana.
The church officials, who included Ortega's secretary Monsignor Ramon Suarez Polcari and spokesman Orlando Marquez, said they would pass the requests along to the cardinal.
The Church intervened last year after the Havana group was subjected to several "acts of repudiation" as they are called in Cuba and got an agreement from the government to allow them to continue silent marches every Sunday from the Santa Rita church on the main avenue of Havana's Miramar neighborhood.
But the Ladies in White say they are being harassed by government supporters when they march elsewhere. Their protests began in March 2003 to demand the release of 75 of their family members jailed in a government crackdown.
As part of the agreement with the Church last year, Cuban President Raul Castro released 115 political prisoners, including those remaining from the crackdown. But the Ladies in White say about 65 political prisoners remain behind bars.
The government appears intent on stopping the development of the chapter in Santiago de Cuba, which is Cuba's second largest city, as the dissident group tries to expand.
Members there have complained about beatings and detentions and said they have been blocked from continuing the Sunday marches they began in mid-July.
Cuban leaders view dissidents as being in the pay of the United States, which works with them and directs funds to Cuban groups under a longstanding program to foster political change on the communist-led island.
In recent days, other dissidents have staged small protests in Havana that ended with them being taken away by government agents.
Videos distributed by the dissidents have shown onlookers shouting at the agents to free the women, which anti-government groups say is evidence of growing restiveness on the island.
So far, the government has said nothing about any of the incidents.
(Writing by Jeff Franks; editing by Anthony Boadle)
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