Cuba blocks access to top Cuban blog


HAVANA (Reuters) -
The Cuban authorities have blocked
access from Cuba to the country's most-read blogger, Yoani
Sanchez, she said on Monday.


Sanchez, whose critical "Generacion Y" blog received 1.2
million hits in February, said Cubans can no longer visit her
Web page (http://www.desdecuba/generaciony/) and two other
home-grown bloggers on the Web site on a server in Germany.


All they can see is a "error downloading" message.


"So the anonymous censors of our famished cyberspace have
tried to shut me in a room, turn off the light and not let my
friends in," she wrote in her blog on Monday.


Sanchez said she cannot directly access her Web site from
Cuba to update postings anymore, but has found a way to beat
her Communist censors through an indirect route.


The 32-year-old philology graduate has attracted a
considerable readership by writing about her daily life in Cuba
and describing economic hardships and political constraints.


She has criticized Cuba's new leader, Raul Castro, who
formally took over from his ailing brother Fidel Castro last
month, for his vague promises of change and minimal steps to
improve the standard of living of Cubans.


"Who is the last in line for a toaster?" was the title of a
recent blog that satirized the lifting of a ban on sales of
computers, DVD players and other appliances Cubans long for,
though toasters will not be freely sold until 2010.


In a country where the press is controlled by the state and
there is no independent media, Sanchez and other bloggers based
in Cuba have found in the Internet an unregulated vehicle of
expression.


"This breath of fresh air has disheveled the hair of
bureaucrats and censors," she said in a telephone interview,
vowing to continue her blog. "Anyone with a bit of computer
skills knows how to get around them," she said.


The aim of government censors is to block readership in
Cuba, where people have limited access to Internet, she said.


"They are admitting that no alternative way of thinking can
exist in Cuba, but people will continue reading us somehow,"
she said. "There is no censorship that can stop people who are
determined to access the Internet," she said.


(Editing by Sandra Maler)

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