International pressure increased amid the deterioration of his health and the risks to his safety.

14ymedio, Havana, June 24, 2026 — Cuban teenager Jonathan David Muir Burgos was released from prison this Wednesday after spending more than three months deprived of his liberty for participating in the protests last March in Morón, Ciego de Ávila. CubaNet confirmed his release through a phone conversation with the young man himself, who turned 17 while incarcerated at the Canaleta provincial prison.
In a brief phone conversation with journalist Camila Acosta, Jonathan confirmed that he was already out of prison. 14ymedio attempted to contact his father, evangelical pastor Elier Muir Ávila, but his phone remained switched off or out of service range. It is common for State Security to try to prevent released political prisoners and their relatives from speaking with the independent press, denouncing the conditions of their imprisonment, or publishing their testimonies on social media.
So far, the Cuban authorities have not announced the release or specified under what precautionary measure Muir Burgos was freed. It is also unknown whether the Prosecutor’s Office has withdrawn the sabotage charge against him or whether the criminal proceedings will continue while he remains out of prison.
The young man was arrested on March 16, three days after the March 13 protest in Morón, which was sparked by prolonged blackouts, food shortages, and deteriorating living conditions. Jonathan appeared, accompanied by his father, evangelical pastor Elier Muir Ávila, in response to a State Security summons. Both were detained, but the pastor was continue reading
The release comes after an intense international campaign on behalf of the teenager, whose health and safety had generated concern
The teenager, who was then 16 years old, was later transferred to Canaleta, an adult prison in Ciego de Ávila, where he remained in pretrial detention. He was being prosecuted for sabotage, a criminal offense that can carry lengthy prison sentences.
The release comes after an intense international campaign in favor of the teenager, whose health and safety had raised concerns among family members, human rights organizations, and foreign officials. Amnesty International called for his immediate release in May and denounced the fact that he was being held with adults.
The organization recalled that the deprivation of liberty of minors should be used only as a last resort and for the shortest possible period. It also demanded that, while he remained detained, Jonathan be protected from violence, receive medical care, and have regular access to his family and a lawyer of his choice.
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights granted precautionary measures in favor of the teenager on April 24, considering that his life, personal integrity, and health were at risk of suffering irreparable harm while in the custody of the Cuban State.
Jonathan was not the only minor detained after the protests in Morón
The family repeatedly reported that Jonathan suffered from dermatological and immunological problems, as well as episodes of weakness that required treatment. After a visit in May, his father said he found him very weak, without the necessary medication, and deeply affected by confinement.
Prisoners Defenders later reported that Muir Burgos slept on mattresses infested with bedbugs, suffered from hypoglycemia, and did not receive adequate medical care. The organization also stated that the minor had been assaulted and harassed inside the prison.
Jonathan turned 17 on May 28 at Canaleta. In the weeks before his release, his case received renewed attention from the United States. The U.S. Embassy in Havana noted on June 16 that the young man had been imprisoned for three months, while Cuban-American Congressman Mario Díaz-Balart demanded his immediate release this Wednesday.
Jonathan was not the only minor detained after the protests in Morón. The imprisonment at Canaleta of 16-year-old Christian de Jesús Crespo Álvarez, also accused of sabotage, has likewise been documented. Human rights organizations maintain that both youths were prosecuted without the special safeguards required for minors. Muir Burgos’s release brings an end, for now, to his stay in an adult prison, but it does not remove the uncertainty surrounding his legal future.
Translated by Regina Anavy
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