The Observatorio Cubano de Derechos Humanos (OCDH), a Madrid-based rights monitor, published its half-year report on Tuesday 7 July, documenting at least 1,949 repressive actions from January to June, 299 of them in June alone 1. The half-year total includes 257 arbitrary detentions and 488 illegal home confinements, with independent journalists the most-targeted group at 91 recorded cases.
These are OCDH's own documented counts, compiled from named-case registries kept in the diaspora, and Lowdown has not re-verified them case by case; Spain's national news agency relayed the same figures 2. June's tally keeps the monthly count near May's 332 logged actions , and Prisoners Defenders separately logged more than 175 new political prisoners across the same half-year . Havana, Camagüey, Santiago de Cuba, Matanzas and Villa Clara were the worst-affected provinces, the same central and eastern belt where the blackouts bite hardest.
The report lands against a week when external economic pressure eased: no OFAC designation between 1 and 9 July, and the EU announcing nothing new at the UN. The US Treasury sanctions office (OFAC) enforces the embargo from outside; the detentions OCDH counts are administered from within. As the sanctions cadence slowed, the repression metric held, which is the trend the half-year figure captures rather than any single week's spike.
