BY ANA ACLE
Marta Beatriz Roque, one of Cuba's best-known opponents of the
Communist
regime, spent her 55th birthday Tuesday -- her first full day
out of prison in
nearly three years -- chatting with loved ones, listening to
music, and relaxing
at home in Havana.
``Prison is very hard, you have to live it to understand,'' Roque
said in a
telephone interview, her voice choking, as Celine Dion's Because
You Loved
Me played in the background. She was released Monday.
But the time behind bars did not alter Roque's stance; she has
publicly
dissented against the government for 11 years. She vowed to continue
to
struggle for democracy.
Her conditional release went unmentioned in Cuban government newspapers,
but made headlines around the world and sparked speculation that
colleague
Rene Gomez Manzano may also be released soon. Her release, which
followed Friday's release of engineer Felix Bonne, also hinted
that Cuba is
trying to ease international pressure stemming from human rights
violations.
The United Nations condemned the government for that record a
month ago,
and Cuba has criticized the censure ever since. On Tuesday, the
Cuban
government singled out former allies Poland and the Czech Republic
for their
unfavorable votes.
U.S. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Cuba should
heed
nations around the world that have called for the abolition of
laws that punish
free expression.
``We welcome the two releases,'' Boucher said. ``But we urge the
Cuban
authorities to free the remaining two members of the Dissident
Working Group
as well as all the other prisoners who are being held for political
reasons.''
Cuban human rights advocate Elizardo Sanchez estimated the number
of
political prisoners at 350, one-third of whom are considered
prisoners of
conscience. ``In my opinion, they should not have ever been jailed,''
Sanchez
said by telephone from Havana. ``Their only crime was to express
a political
opinion.''
Their release, Sanchez said, does not indicate the government
will ease up on
the dissident movement. He predicted it will worsen. ``It would
have been
difficult to explain to the international community that with
more than half of
their sentences completed and with good conduct that they had
not been
freed,'' Sanchez said.
Roque and Bonne, along with lawyer Manzano and former military
fighter pilot
Vladimiro Roca, were jailed in July 1997 and sentenced in March
1999 for
writing a pro-democracy leaflet, The Homeland Belongs to All.
The four were
charged with criticizing the Communist Party's monopoly on power.
Roque was sentenced to 3 1/2 years, Bonne and Gomez to four years
and
Roca to five. Roca remains in solitary confinement, the harshest
of all the
punishments, because he is the son of the late Communist leader
Blas Roca
and was the best known.
``From a personal point of view, I feel good being free,'' Roque
said. ``But . . .
two others remain in prison. We will not be happy until they
are released.''
Roca is president of the Social Democratic Party, Roque is director
of the
Cuban Institute of Independent Economists, Bonne leads the Cuban
Civic
Mainstream, and Gomez presides over an independent lawyers group,
Agramontist Mainstream.
Miami human rights advocate Ruth ``Chuny'' Montaner said Roque
and Bonne
were let out of jail for health reasons.
Roque, who had a 52-day hunger strike, suffers from liver problems
and low
hemoglobin, and Bonne had been hospitalized for 15 days before
his release,
Montaner said.
``Until they are all released, we won't know if the Cuban government
wanted
to avoid a major scandal and released the sick or wanted to move
forward,''
Montaner said. ``So until we really see the next steps . . .
it's too early to say
the reason for this release.''
Copyright 2000 Miami Herald