Identidades in English No 2, May 2014 | Page 6

We are wrapping up this second issue of IDENTIDADES in the midst of our organizational work towards our participation at the May 2015 Latin American Studies Association’s conference, in Chicago. Something about which we are all alarmed are the measures the Cuban government has applied to Manuel Cuesta Morúa, in their effort to prohibit his participation at the meeting—a conference whose precise theme will be democracy. In a public letter titled “Why Am I Not at LASA?” Cuesta Morúa addresses the conference organizers and attendees: “In today’s intolerant Cuban society, the law exists only for enemies.” The earliest glimpses of what Cuesta Morúa was in for show he was arbitrarily arrested just as he was attempting to organize a meeting that would serve as an alternative to the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) summit held in Havana, in January 2014. Once released, a cautionary measure was applied to him that limited his citizen’s rights. 6 The accusation against him that he was “Disseminating false news against world peace was mo F