http://www.monthlyreview.org/mrzine/lamrani111209.html
Contradictions
of Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez
by Salim
Lamrani
On November 7, 2009, the Western media devoted
ample space to the Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez. The news from Havana about the
dispute between the dissident and Cuban authorities circled the world and
overshadowed the rest of the news.1
Sanchez recounted her mishap in detail on her blog
and in the press. In doing so, she declared that she had been detained together
with three friends by "three burly strangers" during an
"afternoon full of blows, shouting and insults".2
She later explained her story, which resembles a
real ordeal:
"The 'aggressors' themselves called for a police car that took my
other two companions away [...] I refused to get in the shiny Geely and
[...] received a barrage of blows, shoves, they carried me with my head down
and tried to shove me into the car. I held onto the door, blows on the
knuckles, I managed to grab a piece of paper that one of them had in his pocket
and I stuck it in my mouth. Another flurry of punches so that I would give the
document back to them.
“ Orlando was already inside, immobilized by a karate hold that kept his
head glued to the floor. One of them put his knee in my chest and the other,
from the front seat, hit me in the kidneys and punched me in the head so that I
would open my mouth and spit out the paper. For a moment I felt as though I
would never get out of that car. ‘This is it, Yoani,’ ‘The clowning around is
over,’ said the one seated in front who was pulling my hair. In the back seat a
rare spectacle ensued: my legs in the air, my face reddening from the pressure
and my body in pain, while Orlando was pinned by a professional thug on the
other side. I just managed to grab his testicles, through his pants, in an act
of desperation. I sunk in my fingernails, imagining that he was going to
continue to smash my chest until the very last breath. ‘Kill me already,’ I
yelled, with my last remaining breath, and the one in the front seat told the
younger one, ‘Let her breathe.’”
"I was listening to Orlando panting and the blows continued to rain
down upon us, I considered opening the door and jumping out, but there was no
handle to open from the inside. We were at their mercy and hearing the voice of
Orlando gave me encouragement. Later he told me that it was the same for him
with my choking words… which told him, 'Yoani is still alive'. They left us in
pain on a street in Timba, a woman approached, 'What’s happened?'… 'A
kidnapping', I managed to say. We cried in each other's arms in the middle of
the sidewalk, I was thinking about Teo, for God's sake how will I explain all
these bruises to him. How am I going to tell him that he lives in a country
where this happens, how am I going to look at him and tell him that his mother,
for writing a blog and putting her views into kilobytes, has been brutalized on
a public street. How will I describe for him the despotic faces of those who
forced us into that car, their evident pleasure as they beat us, lifting my
skirt and dragging me half naked to the car?"3
The United States - where 34-year-old Cuban citizen
Yosvanis Valle had been executed 48 hours earlier, bringing the number of
executions in 2009 to 42 4 - declared its "deep concern",
through State Department spokesman Ian Kelly. "We continue to be concerned
about the personal health and access to medical care of Yoani Sanchez."5
Contradictions
Yoani Sanchez's words are terrifying and
immediately arouse the reader's sympathy and compassion towards the victim.
Nevertheless, it is essential to point out some contradictions that cast a
shadow over the credibility of this tale.
The first surprise for journalists as expressed by
the BBC’s Havana correspondent Fernando Ravsberg: Despite the "blows and
shoving", the "blows to the knuckles", the new "flurry of
punches", the "knee in [her] chest", the "blows to the
kidneys and [...] the head", "hair" pulled, the "face
reddened by the pressure and body aching", the "blows [that]
continued to rain down" and "all these bruises" that the Cuban
blogger described6, Ravsberg noted that Sanchez "has no bruises,
marks or scars".7 Images from the U.S. channel CNN, which also
interviewed the blogger, confirmed the words of the British journalist. In
addition, the CNN correspondent took oratorical precautions and emphasized
Sanchez's "apparent" suffering (using a crutch to move around).8
According to Agence France Presse, which related the story with caution,
clarifying that this is Sanchez's version, and using the title "Cuba: the
blogger Yoani Sanchez says she was beaten and briefly detained", the
blogger "was not injured".9
Questioned about this by the BBC, Yoani Sanchez
tried to explain this contradiction. According to her, the marks and bruises on
her face and body really existed, but had disappeared. "Throughout the
whole weekend I had a swollen cheekbone and eyebrow." All the marks had
disappeared by Monday morning with the arrival of the first foreign journalist.
However, bruises and "several marks" remained, she said, but …
"particularly on the buttocks, unfortunately I cannot show them," she
explained.10
Sanchez did not specify the reasons why she did not
photograph the bruises and marks right after the incident, when they were
visible, which would have provided irrefutable evidence of police violence
against her. With regard to the hair pulled out, which is not visible at all in
the photos and videos, her explanation is simple: "I lost a lot of hair
but with this thick head of hair you can't tell".11
In her blog and in a radio interview, Sanchez spoke
of "the worst sort of Sicilian gang-style kidnapping", giving the
impression that she was detained for several hours.12 But in her
interview with the BBC, when the journalist insisted and asked for
clarification, the blogger confessed that in fact the incident lasted in all "25
minutes". Furthermore, Sanchez asserts that the detention occurred
"in broad daylight, in front of a bus stop full of people."
Nevertheless, the Western press failed to find a single witness, not even
anonymous, to confirm the words of the blogger and thereby certify the veracity
of her statements.13 Similarly, none of the people accompanying
Yoani Sanchez were willing to respond to requests for interviews with the
Western media, directing them to the blogger in charge of speaking on behalf of
all of them.
Beyond all this, it seems surprising and illogical
that the authorities in Havana would have decided to publicly mistreat such a
media-savvy dissident as Yoani Sanchez, knowing for absolute certainty that
such an act would unleash an immediate international scandal. A priori, there
are other much more efficient and discreet ways to intimidate opponents.
Finally, Sanchez sinks into new contradictions when
she tries to clarify some vague areas of her testimony. Thus, she explained
that her resistance was due to the fact that the plain-clothed agents "did
not show anything identifying them as authorities, I would have acted
differently had they been in uniform. I asked them to get a police officer,
they called and a police car arrived that took the other two girls and left me
and Orlando in the hands of these others".14 However, in her
blog, she says the police arrived at the beginning of the situation, but that
would not have prevented her from resisting what seems more and more to be an
identity check carried out by plainclothes police officers rather than a public
lynching.
In short, there is no evidence corroborating the
words of Yoani Sanchez, no other available testimony, not even of the people
who accompanied her. Therefore we have to rely only on the blogger's version,
which is full of contradictions. Given these factors, it is impossible not to
doubt the statements of the famous Cuban blogger.
It is necessary to make a comparison. The Western
press granted, in just 72 hours, more space to Yoani Sanchez and her incident
with the authorities than to all the crimes committed (more than a hundred
murders, a similar number of cases of disappearances, and countless acts of
torture and violence) by the military dictatorship led by the coup leader
Roberto Micheletti since June 27, 2009. Decidedly, Sanchez is not a simple
critical blogger as she pretends.
2. The Yoani Sanchez phenomenon
Yoani Maria Sanchez Cordero is a “Habanera” born in
1975, apparently having graduated in Philology in the year 2000, according to
her blog. There remains doubt about this fact in that during her stay in
Switzerland two years later, when she enrolled with the consular authorities,
she declared a "pre-university" level education, as shown by
the records of the consulate of the Republic of Cuba in Bern.15 So,
after working in the field of publishing and giving courses in Spanish to
tourists, she decided to leave her homeland with her son. On August 26, 2002,
after marrying a German named Karl G., she emigrated to Switzerland with a
"foreign trip permit" valid for eleven months, in the face of the
"disenchantment and economic suffocation" that prevailed in Cuba.16
Interestingly, we learn that after fleeing "an
immense prison with ideological walls"17, to use the words she
uses to refer to the country of her birth, she decided two years later during
the summer 2004 to leave the Swiss paradise, one of the richest nations on
earth, to return to the "leaky boat on the verge of sinking" as she
metaphorically describes the island.18 Faced with this new
contradiction, Sanchez explains that she chose to return home – where the
"cries of the despot" reign19 and where "beings
from the shadows, like vampires, feed on our human happiness and inoculate us
with fear by means of blows, threats, blackmail"20 – "for
family reasons and against the advice of acquaintances and friends".21
When reading Yoani Sanchez's blog, where the Cuban
reality is described in such an apocalyptic and tragic manner, one gets the
impression that purgatory is, by comparison, a seaside resort and that only the
sweltering heat of the antechamber of hell can provide an idea as to the daily
life of Cubans. No positive aspect of Cuban society is portrayed. Only
aberrations, injustices, contradictions, and difficulties are presented.
Consequently, the reader struggles to understand how a young Cuban woman
decided to leave wealthy Switzerland to return to live in what she likens to
Dante's inferno where "pockets were emptying, frustrations growing, and
fear proliferating."22 In her blog, the comments of her foreign
supporters abound in respect to this: "I do not understand your return.
Why didn't you give your son a better future?", and "Dear friend, I
would like to know why you decided to return to Cuba ."23
By contrast, some of her compatriots who live
abroad, disappointed by the western lifestyle, have also expressed their desire
to return to live in Cuba : "I will return". "I have lived in
Miami for 7 years […] and sometimes I question whether the physical exile has
been was worth it". "I need my people [...] Someday I will return
home with my German husband, another fool who wants to apply for residency
there." "Why did you go back?…Loneliness, nostalgia, longing? [Then,
referring to the western world] Strange faces, people sad and fed-up with the
rest of mankind without knowing why, equally corrupt politicians and many gray
days? No need to explain anything. As of 14 years ago there are no suns on my
map of time." "I again sent [the information] to my dad who lives
outside of Cuba , and who has plans to return."24
One of two possibilities – either Yoani was not in
her right mind in deciding to leave the Pearl of Europe and return to Cuba , or
life on the island is not as dramatic as the picture she paints.
In a posting on her blog in July 2007, Yoani
recounted in detail the story of her return to Cuba . "Three years ago
[...] in Zurich [...] I decided to go home and remain in my country”, she said,
emphasizing that it was "a simple story of an immigrant's return to her
homeland." "We bought round trip tickets" for Cuba . So Sanchez
decided to stay in her country and not return to Switzerland . "My friends
thought I was joking, my mother refused to accept that her daughter no longer
lived in the Switzerland of chocolate and milk." On August 12, 2004,
Sanchez showed up at the provincial immigration office in Havana to explain
your case. "What a tremendous shock when they said to me, go to the end of
the line of "the returnees" [...] That is how I encountered all of a
sudden other "crazies" like me, each with their own horrifying story
of return".25
Indeed, Sanchez's case is far from being an
isolated case, as illustrated by this story and the comments left on her blog.
More and more Cubans who chose to emigrate, after facing many difficulties in
adapting and discovering that the western " El Dorado" does
not glitter as much as they had imagined and that the privileges they had
enjoyed at home do not exist anywhere else, decide to return to live in Cuba .
However, Yoani Sanchez fails to give the real
reasons that led her to return to Cuba , beyond the "family reasons"
that she evoked (reasons that her mother apparently did not share, given her
surprise). The Cuban authorities granted her favorable treatment on
humanitarian grounds, allowing her to recover her permanent resident status in
Cuba , even though she had been out of the country for more than 11 months.
In reality, the stay in Switzerland was far from as
idyllic as she had anticipated. Sanchez discovered a western lifestyle
completely different from what she was used to in Cuba, where, despite the
daily difficulties and vicissitudes, all citizens have a relatively balanced
diet despite the ration card and the hardships, access to free health care and
education, free culture and entertainment, a house and an atmosphere of safety
(the island’s crime rate is very low). Cuba is perhaps the only country in the
world where you can live without working (which is not always something
positive). In Switzerland , Sanchez had enormous difficulties finding work and
living decently and so, in desperation, decided to return home and explain the
reasons why to the authorities. According to them, Sanchez had begged, crying
to the immigration services to be granted an exceptional waiver "to revoke
her immigration status”, and they granted it.26
Yoani Sanchez has decided to carefully conceal this
fact.
3. The "cyber-dissidence"
In April 2007, Yoani Sanchez decided to join the
world of the Cuban opposition and founded her blog, Generation Y.
Forgetting the magnanimity of the authorities towards her when she
returned to Cuba in 2004, she thus became a staunch critic of the government in
Havana . Her criticisms are harsh, unnuanced, one-sided. She presents an
apocalyptic view of the Cuban reality and accuses the authorities of being
responsible for all its ills. She never evokes, not even for an instant, the
unique geopolitical circumstances in which Cuba has found itself since 1959.
There are hundreds of blogs in Cuba . A number of them complain incisively
aberrations in Cuban society. But their approach is much more nuanced and the
information less partisan. Nevertheless the Western media has chosen the
black-and-white blog of Sanchez.27
According to this blogger, in Cuba , "the
process, the system, the expectations, the illusions have shipwrecked. A
complete shipwreck", before concluding with this lapidary metaphor:
"The ship has sunk". To her, it is clear that Cuba must change course
and change governments: it is necessary to "change the helmsman and the
entire crew"28 in order to develop "sui generis
capitalism".29
Sanchez is an astute person who has understood
perfectly well that she could prosper quickly with this type of discourse so
valued by the Western press. She has worked out a tacit agreement with the
communications and information transnationals. For the Western media to grant
one the status of "independent blogger" and to enjoy some media
space, it is essential to speak out against the system and the government and
to demand radical change, more specifically the return to private enterprise
capitalism, and not to content oneself with just denouncing some aberrations in
the system.
How can the assertion of collusion between Sanchez
and the media powers be corroborated? In light of the facts. Just a few
weeks after the birth of her blog, the Western press launched an extraordinary
campaign to promote it, presenting her as the blogger who has dared to
challenge the regime and restrictions on freedom of expression. Once again, the
Western media are not afraid of their own contradictions. On the one hand, they
continue to repeat that it is absolutely impossible for any Cuban to undertake
a heterodox discourse on the island, and that making any criticism about the
government or even straying from the official line is prohibited under penalty
of prison. On the other hand, they praise the ingenuity of Yoani Sanchez whose
main activity is to harshly criticize government policy with a freedom of tone
that would be the envy of opponents throughout the world, without the
authorities harassing her.30
Thus, after barely a year of existence, while there
are dozens of blogs older and no less interesting than Sanchez's, the Cuban
blogger won the Ortega y Gasset Prize for Journalism, worth 15,000 euros, on
April 4, 2008, awarded by the Spanish daily El Pais. Customarily, this award
is given to prestigious journalists or writers who have long literary careers.
This is the first time a person with the profile of Sanchez has received it.31
Likewise, the Cuban blogger was chosen among the 100 most influential people in
the world by Time magazine (2008), in company with George W. Bush, Hu
Jintao and the Dalai Lama.32 Her blog was included in the list of 25
best blogs in the world by CNN and Time magazine (2008) and also
won the Spanish Bitacoras.com prize as well as The Bob's (2008).33
On 30 November 2008, the Spanish daily El Pais included her in its list
of the 100 most influential Latin American personalities of the year (a list
which features neither Fidel Castro nor Raúl Castro).34 Foreign
Policy magazine went further in December 2008, by including her among the
10 leading scholars of the year.35 The Mexican magazine Gato
Pardo did the same in 2008.36 The prestigious U.S. university of
Columbia awarded her the Maria Moors Cabot Prize.37 And the list is
long.
However, Yoani Sanchez candidly acknowledges:
"Time magazine has put me together with ninty-nine famous people in
its list of influential people of 2008. Me, who has never stepped onto a stage
or a podium, and whose own neighbors do not know if "Yoani" is
written with an "h" in the middle or an "s" at the end. (…)
Now I have just enough vanity to imagine that the others on the list may be
wondering, who is this unknown Cuban blogger on the list with us?"39
Unwittingly, Sanchez created a giant contradiction for Time magazine:
How can a blogger unknown to her own neighbors be included among the 100 most
influential people in the world? Here, it is undeniable that the U.S. magazine
employed political and ideological criteria in including Sanchez, which casts a
shadow over the credibility of the classification. This applies to the other
awards as well.
The living conditions of Yoani Sanchez
The umpteenth contradiction. The Western
press, in recounting the words of Sanchez, never stops repeating that Cubans
have no internet access, without an explanation as how this blogger can write
daily at her blog from Cuba. Great was the surprise of the 200 international
journalists accredited to the International Tourism Fair in Cuba when, on
Wednesday, May 6, 2009, they spotted Yoani Sanchez calmly installed in the
foyer of the most luxurious tourist establishment on the island, the Hotel
Nacional, accessing the Internet, when the price of the connection is
prohibitive even for a foreign tourist.40
Two questions inevitably arise: How can Yoani
Sanchez connect to the Internet in Cuba when the Western press keeps repeating
that there is not access to it? Where does the money come from that allows her
to live a lifestyle that no other Cuban can afford, when officially she has no
other source of income?
In 2009, the U.S. Treasury Department ordered the
closure of more than eighty websites related to Cuba that promoted trade and
thus violated U.S. legislation on economic sanctions. Interestingly, Yoani
Sanchez's site was not closed even though it proposes the purchase of her book
in Italian, in fact, through Paypal, a system that no Cubans living in
Cuba can use because of the economic sanctions (which prohibit, among other
things, electronic commerce). Similarly, Sanchez has a copyright for her blog ©
2009 Generation Y - All Rights Reserved. No other Cuban blogger can do so
under the laws of the embargo. What explains this unique situation?41
Other questions also require answers. Who is behind
Sanchez's desdecuba.net website whose server is hosted in Germany by the company Cronos AG
Regensburg (which also hosts far-right websites) and is registered under the
name Josef Biechele? It was also discovered that Sanchez registered her domain
name via the U.S. company GoDaddy, whose main characteristic is
anonymity. The Pentagon also uses it to register sites with all the necessary
discretion. How can Yoani Sanchez, a Cuban blogger living in Cuba , register her
site with a U.S. company when the economic sanctions legislation formally
prohibits it?42
Moreover, Yoani Sanchez's site Generation Y
is extremely sophisticated, with portals to Facebook and Twitter.
It also receives 14 million visits per month and is the only one available in
no less than 18 languages (English, French, Spanish, Italian, German,
Portuguese, Russian, Slovenian, Polish, Chinese, Japanese, Lithuanian, Czech,
Bulgarian, Dutch, Finnish, Hungarian, Korean, Greek). No other site in the world,
including those of major international institutions such as the UN, World Bank,
IMF, OECD and the European Union, has as many language versions available. Not
even the U.S. State Department web site or the CIA has such a variety.43
Another surprising detail. The site hosting the
blog of Sanchez has a bandwidth 60 times higher than Cuba has for all its
Internet users! Other questions inevitably arise about it: Who manages these
pages in 18 languages? Who pays the administrators? How much? Who pays for the
translators who work daily on Sanchez's site? How much? Furthermore, the
management of a flow of more than 14 million visitors monthly is extremely
expensive. Who pays for that?44
Yoani Sanchez has a perfect right to speak freely
and issue virulently criticisms of the authorities in Havana – she does not
hesitate to do so – about the difficult daily realities of Cuba . She cannot be
nor should she be criticized for that. Instead, she commits a serious
intellectual imposture when she presents herself as a mere blogger, saying that
her sole purpose is to honestly perform her duty as a citizen.
Her meticulous viciousness in systematically
obscuring reality, evoking only the negative aspects, de-contextualizing the
problems, methodically ignoring the geopolitical environment in which Cuba
finds itself, particularly in its relationship with the U.S. and the relentless
imposition of economic sanctions which affect every Cuban's life, resorting to
lies as was easily verified in the case of the alleged "aggression",
all tend to discredit her. Her role first and foremost is to woo a certain
audience resolutely opposed to the Cuban revolutionary process and to
faithfully misrepresent the Cuban reality in its complexity.
Another unique fact: U.S. president Barack Obama
responded to an interview with Yoani Sanchez. So as the U.S. sinks deeper and
deeper into an unprecedented economic crisis, as the battle over healthcare
reform becomes increasingly difficult, as Afghan and Iraq issues continue to
heat up, in spite of the highly charged agenda of the presidency, with the
extremely sensitive subject of the seven U.S. military bases installed in
Colombia having raised continental disapproval, with a coup in Honduras in
which Washington is seriously implicated, and with hundreds of requests
from around the world for media interviews pending, Barack Obama put all that
aside to answer questions from this Cuban blogger.45
In the interview, Sanchez at no time asked for an
end to the economic sanctions which affect all sectors of Cuban society
starting with the most vulnerable (women, children and elderly), which
represent the main obstacle to development of the country, and which are rejected
by the vast majority of the international community (187 countries in the UN
vote in October 2009) because of their anachronistic, cruel and ineffective
nature. On the contrary, she takes up exactly the rhetoric of Washington :
"The political propaganda tells us that we live in a besieged city, a
David versus Goliath and the ‘voracious enemy’ that is about to pounce on
us." The economic sanctions, which she describes as mere "trade
restrictions" are "so clumsy and outdated"46 not
because they have dramatic consequences for the Cuban population, but because
they are “used as justification both for the
setbacks in productivity and to repress those who think differently."47
These are exactly the same arguments raised by the U.S. representative to the United
Nations in October 2009 to justify the continued state of siege that Washington
has imposed on Cuba since 1960, without explaining why 187 countries in the
world have been willing to participate each of the last 18 years in what she
calls "political propaganda".48
In light of these factors, it is impossible that
Yoani Sanchez is a simple blogger denouncing the difficulties of a system.
Powerful interests are hiding behind the smokescreen that is Generation Y,
which represents a formidable weapon in the media war that the United States
wages against Cuba . Yoani Sanchez has clearly understood that obedience to the
powerful is rewarded handsomely (over $ 100,000 in total).49 She has
chosen to join the business of dissent and live the good days in Cuba .
(Translated from Spanish to English by David
Brookbank)
Notes
1 Andrea
Rodríguez, «Cuban Blogger Says She Is Briefly Detained», The Associated Press,
7 de noviembre de 2009.
2 Yoani Sánchez,
«Secuestro estilo camorra», Generación Y , 8 de noviembre de 2009. http://www.desdecuba.com/generaciony/
(sitio consultado el 15 de noviembre de 2009).
3
Ibid.
4
Agence France Presse, «Texas executes Cuban-born gang member», 11 de noviembre
de 2009.
5
Le Monde, «Cuba: les USA indignés par les mauvais traitements infligés à
des blogueurs», 10 de noviembre de 2009
6 Yoani Sánchez,
«Secuestro estilo camorra», op. cit.
7 Fernando Ravsberg,
«Ataque a bloguera cubana, ¿cambio de política», BBC Mundo , 9 de noviembre de
20009.
8 CNN , «Yoani Sánchez
golpeada en La Habana », 9 de noviembre de 2009. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umu5f6kdUhI&feature=player_embedded
, (sitio consultado el 15 de noviembre de 2009).
9
Agence France Presse, «Cuba: la blogueuse Yoani Sanchez dit avoir été frappée
et brièvement détenue», 7 de noviembre de 2009.
10 Fernando Ravsberg,
«Ataque a bloguera cubana, ¿cambio de política», op. cit.
11 Ibid.
12 Yoani Sánchez,
«Secuestro estilo camorra», op. cit.; Youtube, « Entrevista a Yoani Sánchez
tras la golpiza que recibió por parte del Gobierno Cubano», 9 de noviembre de
2009. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CzDEAZqmtM&feature=related
(sitio consultado el 15 de noviembre de 2009).
13 Fernando Ravsberg,
«Ataque a bloguera cubana, ¿cambio de política», op. cit.
14
Ibid.
15
Correspondence with His Excellency Mr. Isaac Roberto Torres Barrios, Ambassador
of the Republic of Cuba in Bern , November 17, 2009.
16 Yoaní Sánchez, «Mi
perfil», Generación Y.
17
France 24, «Ce pays est une immense prison avec des murs idéologiques»,
22 de octubre de 2009.
18 Yoaní Sánchez, «Siete
preguntas», Generación Y, 18 de noviembre de 2009.
19 Yoaní Sánchez, «Final
de partida», Generación Y, 2 de noviembre de 2009.
20 Yoaní Sánchez, «Seres
de la sombra», Generación Y, 12 de noviembre de 2009.
21 Yoaní Sánchez, «Mi
perfil», Generación Y, op. cit.
22 Yoaní Sánchez, «La
improbable entrevista de Gianni Miná», Generación Y, 9 de mayo de 2009.
23 Yoaní Sánchez, «Vine y
me quedé», Generación Y, 14 de agosto de 2007.
24 Ibid.
25 Ibid.
26
Correspondence with His Excellency Mr. Orlando Requeijo, Ambassador of the
Republic of Cuba in Paris , November 18, 2009.
27 Libertad
Digital, «Yoani Sánchez: Hemos naufragado; hace rato que
estamos bajo el agua », 12 de noviembre de 2009. http://www.libertaddigital.com/mundo/yoani-sanchez-desde-que-comence-a-escribir-el-blog-vivo-un-thriller-de-accion-1276375966/
28 Ibid.
29 Mauricio Vicent, «
"Los cambios llegarán a Cuba, pero no a través del guión del
Gobierno"», El País, 7 de mayo de 2008.
30 Yoani Sánchez, Generación
Y.
31 El
País, « EL PAÍS convoca los Premios Ortega y Gasset de
periodismo 2009», 12 de enero de 2009.
32 Time, «The 2008 Time 100», 2008. http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/0,28757,1733748,00.html
(site consulted November 25, 2009)
33 Yoani Sánchez,
«Premios», Generación Y.
34 Miriam Leiva, « La
Generación Y cubana», El País, 30 de noviembre de 2008.
35 Yoani Sánchez,
«Premios», op. cit.
36 Ibid.
37 Ibid.
38 El
País, « Una de las voces críticas del régimen cubano,
mejor blog del año», 28 de noviembre de 2008.
39 Yoani Sánchez, « ¿Qué
hago yo ahí?», Generación Y, 3 de mayo de 2008.
40 Guillermo Nova,
«Bloguera cubana Yoani Sánchez descubierta escribiendo sus artículos desde el
wi-fi de hoteles», Rebelión, 11 de mayo de 2009.
41 Norelys Morales
Aguilera, «Si los blogs son terapéuticos ¿Quién paga la terapia de Yoani
Sánchez?», La República , 13 de agosto de 2009.
42 Ibid.
43 Yoani Sánchez, Generación
Y.
44 Norelys Morales
Aguilera, «Si los blogs son terapéuticos ¿Quién paga la terapia de Yoani
Sánchez?», op. cit.
45 Yoani Sánchez,
«Respuestas de Barack Obama a Yoani Sánchez», Generación Y, 20 de
noviembre de 2009.
46 Yoani Sánchez, «Siete
preguntas», Generación Y, 19 de noviembre de 2009.
47 Yoani Sánchez, «Made in
USA», Generación Y, 18 de noviembre de 2009.
48 Yoani Sánchez, «Siete
preguntas», op. cit.
49 Yoani Sánchez,
«Premios», Generación Y.
Salim Lamrani is a professor at Paris
Descartes University and Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée University and French
journalist, specialist on relations between Cuba and the US . He has just
published Cuba: Ce
que les médias ne vous diront jamais [
Cuba : What the media will never tell you], ( Paris : Editions Estrella, 2009).
Contact: lamranisalim@yahoo.fr