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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Berta Soler

Interviewed November 22, 2024

First, I want to say that with respect to technology the [government] has access to fiber optics that the common Cuban citizen does not have. This comes directly to the Cuban Government and their people. We have nothing to do with it.

We must thank the U.S. Interests Section, the Czech Embassy, and the Swiss Embassy that have opened their doors to us so that we can communicate abroad. The Internet in Cuba is very closed. Now it costs 4.50 CUC an hour in the cybercafés. Cubans do not have the money to go there.

[The Cuban convertible peso (CUC) is one of Cuba’s two official currencies; the other, which is more widely used by average citizens, is the Cuban peso (CUP). The CUC is pegged to the U.S. dollar and worth 25 times as much as the CUP.]

With respect to cell phone technology, for us it has been a very good thing. Not all of the human rights activists have them; and even those of us that do, when we are detained the State Security agents throw them to the floor and break them.

It’s good because we know we can call each other and find out what is occurring in the east and in the west, even though the Cuban government is always listening to every conversation. It is also very important that by way of Radio Marti, we can listen to what is happening in different … La Poderosa [Radio] – many programs – Radio Republica, by way of many programs we can know what is happening inside Cuba.

We are fighting so that the Cuban people have Internet access like all of the countries in the world with advanced technology. We are lacking a lot, as if we were a third world country.