Jakarta Globe, Jan 26, 2015
US flags are seen in a bici-taxi near the capitol in Havana on Jan. 23, 2015. (AFP Photo/Yamil Lage) |
Jakarta.
US-based peace activist group Codepink will be leading a delegation of 150
people — including an Indonesian participant — to Cuba to mark the recent thaw
in US-Cuba relations, particularly the easing of travel restrictions.
Timed to
coincide with Valentine’s Day, the “To Cuba With Love” delegation will include
a number of renowned activists and leaders from peace and justice movements,
environmental groups, women’s rights
organizations, as well as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning
(LGBTQ) advocacy groups.
Indonesian
activist Tunggal Pawestri will be the only representative from Asia to join the
delegation.
“I’m
jumping on this opportunity to reach out to the Cuban people and its
government,” Tunggal said.
She added
that she was anxious to exchange ideas on issues critical to Indonesia,
including women’s rights, health care, environmental sustainability, poverty
reduction and LGBTQ rights.
“I believe
that Indonesia has a lot to learn from Cuba, especially its legendary health care
system,” said Tunggal, who has been active in advocating for the rights of the
archipelago’s minority groups, including its LGBTQ community.
The
multinational delegation will have the opportunity to conduct high-level
meetings with government officials; visit members of the Cuban Five, Cuban
intelligence officers who were incarcerated in the United Stares in 1998 and
recently released; speak with doctors working to combat Ebola in Africa; meet
with entrepreneurs concerning new business opportunities; and interact with
local residents to discuss the Caribbean nation’s cultural, economic,
environmental, educational, agricultural and health care issues.
The
delegation includes a number of activists who have been involved with Cuban-US
issues for years by protesting the Guantanamo Bay prison and the US-led
economic embargo, and by calling for an end to travel restrictions.
Some,
including Codepink co-founder Medea Benjamin, have had their passports
confiscated and bank accounts frozen for their efforts.
“It’s so
exciting that after 50 years, the US government is finally beginning to lift
the ridiculous restrictions on our right to visit our Cuban neighbors,”
Benjamin said. “We look forward to the
day when all restrictions are lifted.”
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