Back to all interviews
Freedom Collection

Interviews with Regis Iglesias Ramirez

Interviewed May 20, 2024

I was one of the campaign coordinators for the plebiscite on the Varela Project, and in 2003 I was detained during the repressive escalation that was going on. I was travelling in a car with another member of the Christian Liberation Movement [The Christian Liberation Movement is a non-violent Cuban dissident organization advocating for democratic reforms that was founded in 1988. Until his death in 2012, it was led by Oswaldo Paya], Ernesto Martinez Fonseca, when our taxi was surrounded in a police operation, and we were detained in the middle of the road. Ernesto Martinez was released and I was sent to the Headquarters of the Political Police.

After a week of infamous and slanderous accusations, we were put through a judicial process, which I wouldn’t really call by that name, I would call it a judicial farce, or rather a farcical process, because there was nothing judicial about it. I met my lawyer twenty-four hours before this sham of a trial, while others met their lawyers just as the trial was about to begin, when some of them were facing life sentences.

We were pronounced guilty and given long sentences which ranged from six to twenty-eight years in prison under the supposed crime of acts against the territorial integrity and national sovereignty, which is an old law from the penal code, dating from colonial times, and which contained sentences from six years up to the death penalty as punishment for violating this law. We hadn’t violated this or any other law and we were wrongly imprisoned and scattered throughout all the prisons in the country.