Prisoners Defenders, the Spain-based NGO that maintains the census Cuba-watchers rely on, logged 1,260 political prisoners in its April 2026 count, a record high, up from the 1,250 it recorded a month earlier 1. The organisation works from named-case registries kept in the diaspora with witness and family corroboration, which is why its figure runs well above Havana's standing line that the island holds no political prisoners.
The count rises against the same April backdrop in which the OCDH human rights monitor logged 366 repressive actions, its highest monthly figure of the year , and Cuba's Supreme Popular Court rejected dissident Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara's early-release appeal . The stock of political prisoners is being refreshed faster than the announced amnesties draw it down, a pattern that holds across the spring's release theatre.
The number carries direct weight for the diplomatic track. Any US concession contingent on prisoner releases now starts from a denominator of more than a thousand named cases, and Diaz-Canel's offer of dialogue that excludes the detainees themselves puts the file Washington most wants discussed outside the room. A census that climbs while talks proceed is the clearest measure that the pressure campaign and the prisoner question are moving in opposite directions.
