The Friends of Cuban Libraries
PRESS RELEASE
December 14, 2000
Contact: Robert Kent FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (Tel.) 718-340-8494 (e-mail) [log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]
FREED LIBRARIAN CALLS FOR ACTION ON CUBA
Yongyi Song, a Chinese American librarian whose arrest and subsequent release from a Chinese prison was the subject of an international furor earlier this year, has called on the American Library Association to take action regarding "a group of librarians who are now under attack in another country, Cuba." In a December 12 letter to ALA president Nancy Kranich, Mr. Song drew parallels between his own arrest in China, for the alleged crime of gathering published materials about the Cultural Revolution, with the situation of independent librarians in Cuba who have opened more than 60 libraries offering public access to uncensored reading materials. "Because of their defense of intellectual freedom," wrote Mr. Song, "they are being subjected to harassment, intimidation, threats, eviction, arrests and the confiscation of their book collections." Citing investigative reports on what he termed "this shocking situation" by the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) and Amnesty International, Mr. Song drew attention to IFLA's appeal for international solidarity to protest the Cuban government's repression of the independent librarians. "As a matter of principle," wrote Yongyi Song in his letter to ALA President Kranich, "it is important for the ALA to respond to IFLA's appeal for action.... Our duty as librarians is clear, and I respectfully urge the ALA to strongly support Cuba's independent librarians and to actively aid their valiant effort to defend intellectual freedom in a nation where harsh censorship and intolerance have prevailed for many decades." On December 14 Yongyi Song received a response from the ALA reporting that the subject of Cuba's independent librarians will be on the agenda of the ALA International Relations Committee at the association's Midwinter meeting in Washington, D.C., to be held in January 2001.
BACKGROUND: The text of IFLA's report on Cuba can be read on the Internet (www.faife.dk, in the "news and events" section). The Friends of Cuban Libraries, founded in June, 1999, is an independent, nonpartisan, nonprofit support group for the independent librarians. We are concerned exclusively with intellectual freedom issues, as defined by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, regardless of whatever government may be in office in Cuba. We are funded entirely by our members and do not seek or accept funds from other sources. ###
|