I have to confess I'm not a Cuba expert. But when I participate in a blog I have two very useful tools: Search engines and my trusty calculator. So I want to point out I did the search shown below in the last few minutes, using google. My knowledge about what goes in Cuba is a little more direct, I talk quite a bit to Cubans who come to Venezuela and some of them are quite disappointed with what Castro did to their Revolution. Many of them weren't even born when Castro took over, they aren't really pro-capitalism and seem to be more what in the US would be called a progressive. They remind me more of Michael More and politicians like Jerry Brown.
So to give you some references, here's the result of my search:
I guess you could start reading a book by Armando Valladares called "Against all Hope". Here's the amazon.com comments by readers, the comments will give you praise as well as criticism of the book's contents.
http://www.amazon.com/Against-All-Hope-Armando-Valladares/product-reviews/0394534255/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=1Here's the Human Rights Watch webpage about Cuba:
"Raúl Castro's government has locked up scores of people for exercising their fundamental freedoms and allowed scores more political prisoners arrested during Fidel Castro's rule to languish in detention. Rather than dismantle Cuba's repressive machinery, Raúl Castro has kept it firmly in place and fully active."
http://www.hrw.org/americas/cubaAmnestry International's page about Cuba
http://thereport.amnesty.org/en/regions/americas/cubaThe Inteamerican Commission on Human Rights report on Cuba
http://fiu.edu/~fcf/IACHR.htmlAn essay by Vaclav Havel, ex-President of the Czech Republic and former dissident who spent time in jail fighting communism in Eastern Europe.
"This spring marks the third anniversary of the wave of repression in which Fidel Castro’s regime arrested and handed down long sentences to 75 leading Cuban dissidents. Soon afterward, many friends and I formed the International Committee for Democracy in Cuba."
http://havanajournal.com/politics/entry/the-discreet-terror-of-fidel-castro-vaclav-havel/Here's a website written by Lech Walesa, the union leader who formed the Solidarity workers' union, a key contributor to the fall of communism in Poland. The quote is from a letter he wrote to Guillermo Fariñas:
"Yesterday evening (March 11) in a phone conversation with Guillermo Fariñas, the Cuban dissident on hunger strike, President Lech Walesa declared his help and asked for suspending the protest. “I perfectly understand your situation and the situation Cuba is in. I declare my help and support in building a free Cuba. But I would like to ask you to rethink your decision. A free Cuba needs leaders such as you” - said Lech Walesa."
http://www.solidarnizkuba.pl/en/indexUnited Nations report on the human rights situation in Cuba
The situation of human rights in Cuba continues to be characterized by severe restrictions of the rights to freedom of expression and association, the right to form and join trade unions and the right to strike, and strong official control over the individual activities of citizens, including the need for a permit from the Ministry of the Interior for citizens to be able to travel freely abroad, strong repression by the security forces which the maintenance of such control involves, and a system of administration of justice in criminal matters which to a large extent is in the service of
the prevailing political regime.
http://www.un.org/documents/ga/docs/50/plenary/a50-663.htmArticle in the BBC about a blind lawyer being sentenced to four years in jail by the Cuban government:
"Elizardo Sanchez, head of opposition group the Cuban Human Rights Commission, said he had received information of the trial from relatives of the dissidents. He said: "Prosecutors asked for six years and Gonzalez Leiva received four, and the others got lesser terms that we have not yet determined." Before the trial, the New York-based Human Rights Watch group said the situation was a "travesty".
"The trial of a blind lawyer, along with nine other dissidents, continues the repressive trend that was so glaringly evident last year in Cuba," it said in a statement.
In February, a United Nations envoy published a scathing report on Cuba's treatment of political dissidents in prison. French judge Christine Chanet, who was appointed to look into alleged human rights abuses, said reports that dissidents were being held in "trying" conditions were "particularly alarming". Havana had denied Ms Chanet permission to visit and said the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights should be concentrating on alleged abuses at Guantanamo Bay, the US military detention centre in Cuba."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/low/americas/3664527.stmI hope this satisfies your request.