Warning 28 days after the disappearance of a young Cuban

Warning 28 days after the disappearance of a young Cuban in Villa Clara

The Cuban feminist magazine Tense wings issued a warning about the disappearance of the young Cuban 28 days ago Yeniset Rojas Pereza native of Ranchuelo, in Santa Clara.

The project released an urgent message stating that the woman She is the mother of a 10-year-old girl and was last seen on March 19th.

A month after his disappearance, he called on the Cuban police forces to allocate all resources they use to “monitor and harass peaceful activists” to such cases.

“We call on Cuban police forces using law enforcement officers and resources to monitor and harass peaceful activists, but in cases like these and as Yeniset’s own brother has denounced, there is a worrying silence and lack of attention,” the Post stressed.

Recently, Rojas’ brother Yerandy Fleites Pérez admitted that “it seems incredible to him that we disappeared in Cuba” and lamented “that no Mass media reflect the news“.

“For example, it seems incredible to me that Humberto López’s surgical methods are not used when he uses WhatsApp chats, call recordings and other things on TV and the Cuban TV news program as irrefutable evidence against the “lackeys paid by imperialism” (Humbe , interjects Rope on a desperate mother and a 10-year-old girl please) to make the search more exhaustive, albeit totally…” he said angrily.

The family had also been without information about the course of the investigation and the case for six days; and reiterated that “it seems incredible to him that more can be done, much more, and that it is not being done.”

Fleites Pérez, who is not only a playwright but also a professor at the Higher Institute of Art (ISA), expressed his concern that the silence could accumulate the case and begin to forgetand asked who accompanies the family at a time like this.

Dozens of users reacted to the publication, where one can read some comments like this one: “The authorities, as you say, only care about their permanence on the termite throne”, and they assure that the regime no longer cares about ” the once paramount humanity of the state”.

Yeniset Rojas Pérez, a resident of the municipality of Ranchuelo, in the province of Villa Clara, has been missing since 11 am on Saturday March 19.

That day he left his job and went home, but he never came home. He wore gray lycra and a black overcoat with white stripes.

Since then, hundreds of people on social networks have expressed their dismay at the disappearance of the woman, whom many unanimously describe as a good mother and an excellent person.

Enforced disappearances are becoming more common in Cuba, as is the dissemination of requests for help from relatives through social networks, desperate to know the fate of their relatives and given the passivity of the authorities in the search.