Back to all interviews
Freedom Collection

Interviews with Pablo Pacheco Ávila

Interviewed December 27, 2024

The independent journalist in Cuba is the one who unmasks reality, who seeks and then disseminates the information the regime hides with all its might. We are talking from inside prisons; we talk about bread going bad, about evictions. Things the official press dares not publish. Independent journalists, even with many limitations, bravely report on these things.

With the strict censorship the regime has over the population, it’s very difficult for people to know what’s happening. There are no independent newspapers, nothing. But the Cuban people listen to Radio Martí to find out what is happening. Even what’s happening three blocks from their home. Censorship is big.

I think that when a Cuban journalist writes as he is dictated to by the regime, that journalist is a prisoner. The difference with us is that we write without dictate, taking responsibility and assuming the consequences.

The blogging movement is a new tool of independent journalism. With other views, but is the same. It is writing without dictate. It is writing what the conscience dictates. It depicts a picture of what happens in Cuba. It does not necessarily have to be for [consumption] outside [Cuba]. Those outside obviously have to help them publish their notes, reports and articles, because they have no Internet access in Cuba due to the regime´s censorship.

Without those outside it is practically impossible. There are some small pamphlets that are circulated, but I do not think that in Cuba you can do much, because it is tightly controlled. But there are other ways: USBs, memory sticks, disks. They are sent from here [the United States], they arrive in Cuba. Books. In Cuba books are banned! Some books are banned.

Can you imagine not being able to read what you want to read? And you take information to the people when you take a book or a memory stick with news, with lectures from people who talk about democracy, who speak of freedom. I think that´s a way to give out information to the people that so need it.