Cuban Foreign Ministry spokesman Alejandro Gonzalez Thursday said that
although the visitors will be allowed to meet dissidents, Cuba will
''punish'' any ''counterrevolutionary activities'' aimed at disrupting the
summit.
''The leaders will have time and total freedom of movement,'' Gonzalez
said. ''Although many may use that time to do things that we don't like,
we
will not display any signs of offense.''
None of the heads of government attending the summit -- five will
boycott
it -- have yet announced meetings with dissidents, although Spanish
President Jose Maria Aznar is reported to be trying to arrange one.
Opponents of President Fidel Castro hope to hold several activities in
coming days, from a dissidents' summit to a peasant conference, to capture
international attention for their demands for freedom and democracy.
But Elizardo Sanchez, head of the Cuban Commission on Human Rights and
Reconciliation, said Thursday in a telephone interview from Havana that
the
Castro government appears bent on blocking any public protests.
Sanchez said three dissidents were arrested over the last five days,
with
two remaining under detention Thursday: Oscar Elias Biscet, 37; and Carlos
Rios Otero, an activist in several groups opposed to Castro.
It was the 25th time in the past year that police have detained Biscet,
a
physician who heads the Lawton Human Rights Foundation, an outspoken group
that has staged several small but unprecedented public protests.
His wife, Elsa Morejon, said police told her after Biscet's arrest
Wednesday morning that she would be able to visit him in jail next
Wednesday -- indicating they plan to hold him for a while.
''The most likely thing is that they will keep him until the summit is
over,'' she told The Herald.
Sanchez said some 17 other dissidents were harassed or threatened in an
''arbitrary'' manner, adding that state security agents showed no judicial
orders backing their actions.
A few dissidents who were in Havana illegally were deported to their
provincial homes, Sanchez said. Cubans require government permits to move
permanently from one municipality to another.
And some opposition figures living outside Havana were told by security
agents that they would not be allowed to travel to the capital until the
summit ends, he added.
Sanchez said he did not give credence to speculation that the
government
is preparing a makeshift outdoor prison outside Havana to hold all the
dissidents expected to be rounded up during the summit.
''This government has a surplus of penal capacity,'' he said.
Word on the crackdown came two days after Castro, in a five-hour
television appearance, named some 30 dissidents as
''counterrevolutionaries'' and accused them and U.S. diplomats in Havana
of
trying to disrupt the summit.
Castro later told journalists that Cuba's best-known dissidents, the
so-called Group of Four, would not be allowed out of prison ''one day''
before they serve their sentences, according to published reports.
Several foreign governments have asked Castro to free Marta Beatriz
Roque, Vladimiro Roca, Rene Gomez Manzano and Felix Bonne, convicted of
sedition in a closed-door trial earlier this year and sentenced to prison
terms ranging from 3 to 4 1/2 years.
Before summit, Cuban police reportedly target 20 dissidents