Editor’s Note: Tremenda Nota is the Washington Blade’s partner media in Cuba. This article was posted on Tremenda Nota’s website on Nov.
27. HAVANA — A group of dissident artists and activists are the protagonists of one of the most acute political crises the Cuban government has experienced so far this century.
After 10 days held up in a house in Old Havana and after a week on hunger strike, activists from the San Isidro Movement (MSI) were forcibly evicted on Thursday night during a major police operation.
This outcome was one of the least likely for an incident that has lasted for a couple of weeks. Harassment and probable hospitalization of Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara or Maykel Osorbo, the two group members who also began a thirst