Cuba has ordered jailed punk rocker Gorki Aguila, an outspoken critic of former Cuban president Fidel Castro and the communist government, to stand trial today for “social dangerousness,” a charge that could carry up to four years in prison.
Authorities arrested the 39-year-old lead singer of Porno para Ricardo at his Havana home on Monday, shortly after the band had completed work on a new album. Cuban law defines “social dangerousness” as behavior contrary to “communist morality,” and police use it to detain offenders before they have a chance to commit a crime.
Performing songs with angry lyrics that poke fun at or openly insult Fidel Castro and his brother Raul, who became Cuba’s president in February, Porno para Ricardo is banned from official Cuban airwaves.
The government often applies the “social dangerousness” charge in cases of public drunkenness or as a way to keep large groups of unemployed Cubans — or those simply skipping work — from congregating on city streets during business hours. It is also applied to cases of drug addiction and “anti-social behavior.”
But Aguila works for Cuba’s film institute and was doing nothing out of the ordinary when police came and took him away, his father Luis said on Wednesday.
The arrest has touched off an avalanche of criticism on blogs in Cuba and the US. Musicians on and off the island also sent e-mails decrying the case.
Aguila remains in police custody but has been well-treated and is in good spirits, his father said.
He added that Gorki is upset he may miss his daughter’s second birthday on Monday.
Elizardo Sanchez, head of the independent Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation, released a statement on Wednesday saying legal protocols should mean the trial will be held in public.
He said Aguila has asked “diplomatic observers” to attend, apparently hoping they will be allowed to get a glimpse of a legal system seldom seen by foreigners in this closed society.
Sanchez’s statement said that after investigating, the commission determined that “Gorki Aguila has not committed any specific crime as defined by the current criminal code.”
The Cuban government has not commented.
“These kinds of trials are very biased. It’s difficult for someone to be absolved,” said Ciro Diaz, guitarist for the band, whose name means “porno for Ricardo” in English.
“A lawyer can do very little because there’s no evidence of criminal activity presented, only what the police say,” Diaz said.
He said there were rumors months ago that the police would break up a concert and that Aguila’s neighbors complained of excess noise during rehearsals.
“We’ve finished our new album. We don’t know if this is because of that or if it could be something that’s been cooking for months,” Diaz said.
In the sweltering streets of Jakarta, buskers carry towering, hollow puppets and pass around a bucket for donations. Now, they fear becoming outlaws. City authorities said they would crack down on use of the sacred ondel-ondel puppets, which can stand as tall as a truck, and they are drafting legislation to remove what they view as a street nuisance. Performances featuring the puppets — originally used by Jakarta’s Betawi people to ward off evil spirits — would be allowed only at set events. The ban could leave many ondel-ondel buskers in Jakarta jobless. “I am confused and anxious. I fear getting raided or even
Kemal Ozdemir looked up at the bare peaks of Mount Cilo in Turkey’s Kurdish majority southeast. “There were glaciers 10 years ago,” he recalled under a cloudless sky. A mountain guide for 15 years, Ozdemir then turned toward the torrent carrying dozens of blocks of ice below a slope covered with grass and rocks — a sign of glacier loss being exacerbated by global warming. “You can see that there are quite a few pieces of glacier in the water right now ... the reason why the waterfalls flow lushly actually shows us how fast the ice is melting,” he said.
Eleven people, including a former minister, were arrested in Serbia on Friday over a train station disaster in which 16 people died. The concrete canopy of the newly renovated station in the northern city of Novi Sad collapsed on Nov. 1, 2024 in a disaster widely blamed on corruption and poor oversight. It sparked a wave of student-led protests and led to the resignation of then-Serbian prime minister Milos Vucevic and the fall of his government. The public prosecutor’s office in Novi Sad opened an investigation into the accident and deaths. In February, the public prosecutor’s office for organized crime opened another probe into
RISING RACISM: A Japanese group called on China to assure safety in the country, while the Chinese embassy in Tokyo urged action against a ‘surge in xenophobia’ A Japanese woman living in China was attacked and injured by a man in a subway station in Suzhou, China, Japanese media said, hours after two Chinese men were seriously injured in violence in Tokyo. The attacks on Thursday raised concern about xenophobic sentiment in China and Japan that have been blamed for assaults in both countries. It was the third attack involving Japanese living in China since last year. In the two previous cases in China, Chinese authorities have insisted they were isolated incidents. Japanese broadcaster NHK did not identify the woman injured in Suzhou by name, but, citing the Japanese