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Cuba Dispatch
27APR

Ten years sought for a blackout protest

1 min read
10:55UTC

Three UNPACU women, held 18 months since a November 2024 blackout cacerolazo at Palmarito de Cauto, faced prosecution demands of 10, 8 and 5 years, with a verdict due on 1 July.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Cuban prosecutors sought up to 10 years for three UNPACU women over a 2024 blackout protest.

Three women from UNPACU (the Patriotic Union of Cuba, an opposition group), Mileidis Maceo Quiñones, Edilkis León Giraudis and Oneida Quiñones, were tried at Palma Soriano, near Santiago de Cuba, over a cacerolazo (a pot-banging protest) during an all-day blackout at Palmarito de Cauto on 15 November 2024 1. Prosecutors sought 10, 8 and 5 years; the heaviest charge, against Maceo Quiñones, is "atentado", assault on authority .

Oneida Quiñones, who has a missing hand, diabetes and hypertension, is held under house arrest rather than in prison on health grounds. All three had spent 18 months in pre-trial detention, and a verdict was due on 1 July. The charges turn a blackout protest, the same grievance now driving cacerolazos across the island, into a decade of prison sought for one participant.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Three women in eastern Cuba, all members of the opposition group UNPACU, were on trial for banging pots and pans in the street during a blackout in November 2024, a common form of protest in Cuba called a cacerolazo. Prosecutors want ten years for one, eight for another, and five for the third, who has a physical disability. All three have already spent 18 months in jail awaiting trial. A verdict was due on 1 July 2026, but as of that date no outcome had been reported.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Cuba classifies protest-adjacent offences under crimes against state authority (atentado) and public order categories carrying sentencing ranges designed for actual violence against officials, so a cacerolazo, banging pots during a blackout, can be charged and sentenced on the same scale as a physical assault.

The 18-month pre-trial span stems from Cuba's criminal procedure allowing extended provisional detention pending investigation without the fixed judicial-review deadlines that would force an earlier resolution, a structural gap rather than a decision specific to this case.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If sentenced at the terms prosecutors sought, Maceo Quiñones would face ten years for a protest offence with no allegation of injury to any official.

  • Meaning

    The 18-month pre-trial span itself, independent of any eventual sentence, is the kind of delay human-rights monitors already treat as a due-process complaint on its own.

First Reported In

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14ymedio· 1 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Ten years sought for a blackout protest
Prosecutors want a decade in prison for a pot-banging blackout protest, with the verdict due 1 July.
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