Luis Robles Surprises the Cuban Regime with โHis Departure: How He Managed to Escape
Luis Robles, a Cuban activist declared a prisonerโ of conscience by Amnesty International, and his seven-year-old son arrived at Madrid Adolfo Suarez Airport this Monday, marking the beginning of a new chapter โขin their lives. Robles’ departure represents a notable growth, as he revealed the Cuban state Security attempted to control the terms of his exit from the country.
Prior to leaving Cuba, Robles stated that authorities were aware of his desire to departโฃ once his sentence concluded, but sought to silence him. “They were told that the day my sanction ended, my wish was to leave,โ as I suffered and my entire family suffered threats. Theyโ were interested in me leaving, but with the prohibition of talking about what โI โexperienced in prison, under threat,” he explained.
Robles,โ 32, deliberately concealed his escape plans to avoid intervention. “I decided to leave the country, โคbut I didn’t say how. When they found out,I was already out,and that took them โคby surpriseโ because I didn’t give them access to my life,” he recounted.
His imprisonment โขstemmed from a peaceful act of protest in December 2020, where he โขdisplayed a banner on San Rafael Boulevard reading: “Freedom, no more repression, #FreeDenis” in support of rapper Denis Solรญs. The โact, widely shared onโ social media, became a symbol of citizen resistance and was even incorporated into theโฃ music videoโ for the anthem “Homeland and Life” – a videoโค ironically used as evidence against him by the Prosecutor’s Office.
Duringโข his trial, Robles was accused of “resistance” and “enemy propaganda,” despite video evidence demonstrating his non-violentโข conduct during arrest and lack of โincitement to violence. In March 2022, he was sentenced to five years in prison, โwith the court justifying the punishment by citing his connection to influencer Alexander Otaola and allegingโ his message aimed to “destabilize the internal order.”
The sentence drew strong condemnation from international human rights organizations.In May 2024, the United States Government responded by imposing sanctions on four Cuban judges and prosecutors involved in the case: Gladys marรญa Padrรณn Canals, โMarรญa elena Fornari Conde, Juan Sosa Orama, and Yanaisa Matos Legrรก. Theseโ officials, and their families, are now prohibitedโ from entering the โUnited States due โto their participation in Robles’ “arbitraryโ detention” and “seriousโข violation of human rights.”
Throughout his incarceration at the Combinado del Este prison, Robles faced punishmentโข and periods of isolation.His family also endured constant harassment. Hisโ brother, โขLester Fernandez, was arrested and fined 7,000 pesos under the accusation of โข”illegal departure from the country,” โขdespite a lack of evidence.
Robles’ mother, Yindra Elizรกstigui, emerged as a prominent advocate for the release of political prisoners, publicly denouncing the regime’s abuses. โ “We must continue defending โคthe innocent, because our children are not criminals,” she stated in 2023 following another denial of her son’s release.
A graduate in Computer Science, Robles had previously expressed โcritical views of the Cuban government. Days before his arrest,โข he recorded a video stating: “We sincerely wish for a changeโ in the system, as communism has turnedโข this country into aโ hell where it is indeed impossible to breathe peace and freedom.”