(EUROPA PRESS) -The Spanish government has clarified that it cannot provide assistance to Mario Josué Prieto, the young Spaniard imprisoned in Cuba for participating in the 2021 anti-government demonstrations on the island and sentenced to 12 years for sedition, since he continues to have also Cuban nationality.
This has been indicated in a parliamentary response, to which Europa Press has had access, after the PP was interested in this case and in the support that the Government is giving him after his parents’ request for help, which sent a letter to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, José Manuel Albares, in September.
Foreign Affairs explained that both the Embassy and the Consulate General in Havana “have been following the case” and have taken steps with the Cuban authorities “to alleviate their prison situation.”
Foreign Affairs explained that both the Embassy and the Consulate General in Havana “have been following the case” and have taken steps with the Cuban authorities “to alleviate their prison situation.”
However, they have clarified that since Prieto also holds Cuban citizenship “it is not possible to provide the usual assistance to the detainee” that is normally provided in the cases of Spaniards imprisoned abroad.
In his case, the reason is none other than article 36 of the Cuban Constitution, which states that “Cuban citizens, while they are in national territory (…) cannot use a foreign nationality,” he explained. Foreign in the answer.
However, he has assured that the Embassy in Havana “is in contact with the family” of Prieto. The young man, who lived in the United States, was trapped on the Island during a visit to his family due to the start of the pandemic in March 2020.
About Prieto weighs an arrest warrant from 2019 in Suffolk County (Virginia), as confirmed by the Police to 14ymedio and that it is still valid for the crimes of robbery, improper conduct, evasion of the Police, assault on a family member and littering in public spaces.
After arriving in Cuba, on July 11, 2021, he participated in an anti-government demonstration in Holguín and was arrested, although he was released two days later, to be arrested again on July 23. Subsequently, he was sentenced to 12 years in prison for sedition.
In September, the Cuban Observatory for Human Rights (OCDH) sent the government a legal report on the situation of Mario Josué Prieto, whom it defines as a “political prisoner.”
In the opinion of the OCDH, the fact that the Cuban authorities are applying the “principle of effective citizenship does not prevent the Spanish authorities from intervening”
According to this body, which has analyzed the sentence against him, the crime of sedition of which he is accused was never proven and the principle or guarantee that people should be tried by a natural judge and not by courts was not respected. or emergency rooms, as well as the personal circumstances and health of the detainee were not taken into account.
In the opinion of the OCDH, the fact that the Cuban authorities are applying the “principle of effective citizenship does not prevent the Spanish authorities from intervening” in this case, given that “obvious legal errors have been made and it is a serious and humanitarian, with danger to the life of the Spanish citizen”. Thus, he maintained that “pressure from Spain could be decisive in obtaining his release.”
The observatory then warned that Prieto is a psychiatric patient and had made two suicide attempts. To these has allegedly been added one more last week, when he tried to commit suicide in the hospital where he is confined in Holguín due to the health problems that he has presented since his entry into prison, according to what his mother told the outlet. Spanish Digital Freedom.
________________________
Collaborate with our work:
The team of 14ymedio He is committed to doing serious journalism that reflects the reality of deep Cuba. Thank you for accompanying us on this long road. We invite you to continue supporting us, but this time becoming a member of our newspaper. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.