Dissident organizations
reported that dozens of anti-government activists were arrested as they
made their way to Paya's funeral. Video showed police pushing several
dissidents into buses.
The Cuban government Tuesday did not immediately respond to CNN's inquiries regarding the arrests.
Payá, 60, and another
dissident Harold Cepero Escalante died Sunday after the car they were
traveling in crashed near La Gavina, Cuba.
Two other men in the car,
Spanish politician Angel Carromero and Swedish politician Aron Modig,
survived and were released from the hospital on Monday.
Carromero was behind the
wheel when the rental car crashed said Francisco de Borja Morate Martín,
a counselor in the Spanish Embassy in Havana.
"He is very shaken
psychologically," he said. The diplomat said that on Tuesday Carromero
was, for a second day, speaking to Cuban police and was being assisted
by Spain's consul to Cuba.
Carromero's testimony could be key to determining how Payá, one of Cuba's best known dissidents, died.
On Sunday, family members told CNN that the car he was had been run off the road by another, apparently on purpose.
But a statement released
by the Cuban government on Sunday said witnesses to the crash reported
the car had lost control on its own and crashed into a tree.
Oswaldo Payá was a long
standing thorn in the side of Cuba's government, which considers
dissidents to be paid mercenaries who have betrayed their own country.
In 2003, Payá received
the European Parliament's Sakharov prize for freedom of expression. The
award is named for Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov and is awarded to
those who work to promote human rights and democracy.
The Varela Project, a
signature drive led by Payá, delivered thousands of signed petitions
asking for changes to Cuba's political system.
The initiative was
largely ignored by Cuba's leaders, but former President Jimmy Carter
highlighted Payá's work during his trip to Cuba, the first made by a
former U.S. president to Cuba since the 1959 revolution.
Amid the questions that
swirl around Payá's death, some of his fellow dissidents called for an
end to the conspiracy theories and for a transparent investigation into
how he died.
"He tried to carry out
reform in a nonviolent way," said fellow dissident Elizardo Sanchez. "It
turns out that he died in a violent way; an absurd and strange
accident."
According to a government statement, Cuban police are investigating the circumstances of Paya's death.
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