Showing posts with label Free the Five. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free the Five. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Giant Billboard for the Cuban Five Is Raised in the Heart of Miami


10 Abril 2012

La semana pasada dijimos que estábamos trabajando en un plan secreto que sería una sorpresa para todos. Pues ya la sorpresa es noticia. Se trata de una valla anunciadora de Radio-Miami y la Alianza Martiana, en la que se reclama la libertad de los Cinco cubanos anti-terroristas injustamente presos en cárceles norteamericanas.

La valla está situada en la primera calle del South West de Miami y la 17 avenida, en el mismo corazón de la Pequeña Habana. El texto es en inglés e invita al pueblo miamense a conectarse con la dirección electrónica radio-miami.org a ver el video Freedom, donde el Presidente del Parlamento Cubano Ricardo Alarcón expone en idioma inglés el caso de los Cinco.

Hasta ahora, sin novedad en el frente. Veremos que pasa mañana con los Iracundos de Miami y la libertad de expresión.

Cubadebate

Friday, March 2, 2012

Cuban Hero Sends Letter to Brother

In the United States, you can only get justice if you promote dog-eat-dog American capitalism on a 24/7 basis.

Orlando Gonzalez is a big hero in Cuba. He put his life on the line to monitor the activities of the Miami terrorists, who many times, are financed and directed by the United States government. USA hatred of Cuban communists is very similar to the hatred of Adolf Hitler toward Jews.

Boston.com has published a report about Rene Gonzalez, "a Cuban hero on probation in the U.S. after serving a 13-year prison term. He has told his gravely ill brother in a letter that he hopes they can see each other again, according to a letter the man’s lawyer released Thursday."

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Rene González Asks Permission to Temporarily Visit Cuba


By: Redaction, AHORA

Tuesday, 28 February 2012 12:22

René González, one of the five Cubans imprisoned in the U.S. and now serving probation in that country, asked a US Court permission to temporarily travel to Cuba to visit his seriously ill brother, AP reported on Tuesday.

Gonzalez's attorney requested a Miami federal court to allow Rene to visit Cuba for two weeks, so he can see his 53-year-old brother, who is in serious condition after battling with lung cancer.

The attorney also says Gonzalez has fully complied with his probation since his release from U.S. prison five months ago. / RHC

Monday, January 23, 2012

The Cases of Alan Gross and the Cuban Five

Center For International Policy - Cuba Report



Posted on 01/17/2012 by Center for International Policy



By Salim Lamrani, with contributions from Wayne Smith




The way may be opening for increased U.S.-Cuban ties. The United States has removed all restrictions on Cuban-American travel from the U.S. to Cuba and all limitations on Cuban-American remittances to families on the island. Coming at a time when the Cuban government is encouraging the establishment of small private enterprises, this opens the way for importantly increased ties between the two communities-as one observer put it: “for an inflow of capital from the U.S. to Cuba.”



There is, however, the proverbial “fly in the ointment” and that is the case of Alan Gross, arrested on December 3 of 2009 and since then representing a major obstacle to improved relations–along with the case of the Cuban Five on the other side (but more on that later).



Who is Alan Gross?



Alan Gross is a 61 year-old Jewish U.S. citizen from Potomac, Maryland who is an employee of Development Alternatives, Inc. (DAI), a subcontractor of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) which itself is a dependency of the State Department. In December 2009, when Gross was about to leave Cuba with a simple tourist visa–after his fifth visit that year–Cuban state security authorities detained him at the International Airport in Havana. An investigation discovered links between him and the internal opposition to the Cuban government. Gross had been distributing among the opposition portable computers and satellite telephones as part of the State Department program for “promoting democracy in Cuba.” [1]



A long-distance communications technology expert, Gross has great experience in the field. He has worked in more than 50 nations and set up satellite communications systems during the military interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan to circumvent channels controlled by local authorities. [2]



Possession of a satellite phone is strictly forbidden in Cuba for national security reasons and telecommunications are a state monopoly with competition forbidden. [3]



Aid for the Cuban Jewish Community?



The State Department, demanding the release of the detainee declared, “Gross works for international development and traveled to Cuba to assist the members of the Jewish community in Havana to connect with other Jewish communities in the world.” According to Washington, Gross’ activities were legitimate and did not violate Cuban legislation.[4]



In October 2010, during the annual session of the UN General Assembly, Arturo Valenzuela, then assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, met with Bruno Rodríguez, Cuban minister for foreign affairs, to discuss Gross. This was the most important diplomatic meeting between representatives from both nations since the beginning of Obama’s era. [5]



Alan Gross’ family also said that his frequent trips to the island were to allow the Jewish community in Havana to gain access to the Internet and to communicate with Jews all over the world.[6] His lawyer, Peter J. Kahn, endorsed their words, “His work in Cuba had nothing to do with politics; it was simply aimed at helping the small, peaceful, non-dissident Jewish community in the country. [7]



Gross doubtless had contact with some members of the Jewish community in Cuba. Leaders of the Jewish community in Havana, however, contradict the official U.S. version of his relationship. In fact, leaders of the community affirm they did not know Alan Gross, and had never met with him despite his five visits to Cuba in 2009. Adela Dworin, president of the Beth Shalom Temple, rejected Washington’s statements. “It’s lamentable […]. The saddest part is that they tried to involve the Jewish community in Cuba which has nothing to do with this.”



Mayra Levy, speaker of the Sephardic Hebraic Center, declared she didn’t know who Gross was and added he had never been to her institution. The Associated Press said “the leaders of the Jewish community in Cuba denied the American contractor Alan Gross […] had collaborated with them.” [8] In like manner, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency reported that “the main Jewish groups in Cuba had denied having any contracts with Alan Gross or any knowledge of his project.” [9]



Reverend Oden Mariachal, secretary of the Consejo de Iglesias de Cuba (CIC) [Cuban Council of Churches] which includes the [non-Catholic] Christian religious institutions and the Jewish community in Cuba, confirmed this position at a meeting with Peter Brennan, State Department coordinator for Cuban Affairs. On the occasion of the General Assembly of Churches of Christ in the U.S., held in Washington in 2010, the religious leader rejected Gross’ allegations. “What we made clear is what the Cuban Jewish Community, a member of the Cuban Council of Churches, told us, ‘We never had a relationship with that gentleman; he never brought us any equipment.’ They denied any kind of relationship with Alan Gross.”[10]



In fact, the small Cuban Jewish community, far from isolated, is perfectly integrated in society and has excellent relations with the political authorities in the Island. Fidel Castro, although very critical of Israeli policy in the occupied territories, declared to American journalist Jeffrey Goldberg that in history “no one has been as slandered as the Jews. They were exiled from their land, persecuted and mistreated everywhere in the world. The Jews had a more difficult existence than ours. Nothing can compare to the Holocaust,” he said. [11]



Cuban President Raúl Castro attended the religious ceremony for Hanukkah-the Festival of Lights–at the Shalom Synagogue in Havana, in December 2010. The visit was broadcast live on Cuban TV and published in the front page of newspaper Granma. He took the opportunity to greet “the Cuban Jewish community and the fabulous history of the Hebrew people.” [12]



Moreover, the Cuban Jewish community has all the technological facilities needed to communicate with the rest of the world, thanks to the assistance of other international Jewish entities such as the B’nai Brith and the Cuban Jewish Relief Project, the Canadian Jewish Congress (CJC), the World ORT, the Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) or the United Jewish Committee (UJC); all of it endorsed by the Cuban authorities. [13]



Arturo López-Levy, B’nai Brith secretary for the Cuban Jewish community between 1999 and 2001, and today a professor at Denver University, is also skeptical about the U.S. version of the Gross case. On the subject, he stated, “Gross was not arrested for being Jewish or for his alleged activities of technological aid to the Cuban Jewish community which already had an informatics lab, electronic mail and Internet access before he got to Havana. [The Jews in Cuba] do not gather at a synagogue to conspire with the political opposition because this would jeopardize their cooperation with the government which is needed for their activities: the emigration to Israel program, the Right by Birth project–through which young Cuban Jews travel to Israel every year–or to deal with humanitarian aid. To protect the most important they detach themselves as much as possible from the U.S. programs of political interference on Cuban internal affairs. Gross travelled to Cuba not to work with any Jewish organization but for USAID.” [14]



Wayne S. Smith, chief of the U.S. Interests Section in Cuba from 1979 to 1982 and director of Cuba Program of the Center for International Policy in Washington, said that “in other words, Gross was involved in a program whose intentions were clearly hostile to Cuba, because its objective is nothing less than regime change.” [15]



Illegal Activities According to Cuban Authorities



Cuban authorities suspected Gross of espionage and internal subversion activities. [16]Ricardo Alarcon, president of the Cuban Parliament, declared he had violated the country’s legislation. “He violated Cuban laws, national sovereignty, and committed crimes that in the U.S. are most severely punished.”[17]



Gross, a USAID employee was providing sophisticated communications equipment. The distribution and use of satellite phones is regulated in Cuba and it is forbidden to import them without authorization. On the other hand, Article 11 of Cuban Law 88 reads that, “He who, in order to perform the acts described in this Law, directly or through a third party, receives, distributes or takes part in the distribution of financial means, material or of other kind, from the Government of the United States of America, its agencies, dependencies, representatives, officials, or from private entities is liable to prison terms from 3 to 8 years.” [18]



This severity is not unique to Cuban legislation. U.S. law prescribes similar penalties for this type of crime. The Foreign Agents Registration Act prescribes that any un-registered agent “who requests, collects, supplies or spends contributions, loans, money or any valuable object in his own interest” may be liable to a sentence of five years in prison and a fine of 10,000 dollars. [19]



French legislation also punishes this type of action. According to Article 411-8 of the Penal Code, “the act of exercising on behalf of a foreign power, a foreign company or organization or company or organization under the control of a foreign agent, any act aimed at supplying devices, information, procedures, objects, documents, informatics data or files whose exploitation, spreading, or gathering can by nature attempt against the fundamental interests of the nation is punishable with ten years of imprisonment and a fine of 150,000 Euros.”[20]



On February 4, 2011, the prosecutor of the Republic of Cuba formally accused Alan Gross of “acts against the integrity and independence of the nation,” and demanded a jail sentence of 20 years. On March 12, 2011 Gross was finally sentenced to 15 years imprisonment after his trial.[21] The lawyer for the defense, Peter J. Kahn, expressed his regret that his client was “caught in the middle of a long political dispute between Cuba and the United States.” [22]



The New York Times remembers that Gross “was arrested last December during a trip to Cuba as part of a semi-clandestine USAID program, a service of foreign aid of the State Department destined to undermine the Cuban Government,” The New York paper also indicated that “U.S. authorities have admitted that Mr. Gross entered Cuba without the appropriate visa and have said he distributed satellite telephones to religious groups. [23]



Since 1992 and the adoption of the Torricelli Act, the U.S. openly admits its objective towards Cuba is “regime change” and one of the pillars of this policy is to organize, finance and equip an internal opposition. [24]



USAID, which is in charge of the implementation of the plan, admits that, as part of this program, it finances the Cuban opposition. According to the Agency for the 2009 fiscal year the amount destined for aid to Cuban dissidents was of 15.62 million dollars. Since 1996 a total of 140 million dollars have been dedicated to the program aimed at overthrowing the Cuban government. “The largest part of this figure is for individuals inside Cuba. Our objective is to maximize the amount of the support that benefits the Cubans in the Island.”[25]



The government agency also stresses the following, “We have trained hundreds of journalists in a ten year period and their work is seen in mainstream international media.” Formed and paid by the U.S., they represent, above all, the interests of Washington whose objective is a “regime change” on the island. [26]



From a juridical point of view, this reality in fact places the dissidents who accept the emoluments offered by USAID in the position of being agents at the service of a foreign power, which constitutes a serious violation of the Cuban Penal Code. The agency is aware of this reality and simply reminds all that “nobody is obliged to accept or be part of the programs of the government of the United States.” [27]



Judy Gross, the wife of Alan Gross, was authorized to visit him in prison for the first time in July 2010. [28]She took the occasion to send a letter to Cuban President Raúl Castro in which she expressed her repentance and apologized for the acts of her husband. “I understand today the Cuban Government does not appreciate the type of work Alan was doing in Cuba. His intention was never to hurt your government.” [29]



Judy Gross also accuses the State Department of not having explained to her husband that his activities were illegal in Cuba. If Alan had known that something would happen to him in Cuba, he would not have done that. I think he was not clearly informed about the risks.” [30]



A Way Out?



Clearly, Alan Gross violated the law. Of that there can be no doubt. On the other hand, he seems to have done little harm. His continued incarceration results in no important benefits to the U.S. His release, on the other hand, could be a major step toward improved U.S.-Cuban relations, especially if in the process he were prepared to apologize for his actions.



There is another side to the matter, however, and that has to do with the so-called Cuban Five. Just as the U.S. seems unwilling to move ahead in relations unless there is some movement in the Gross case, so do the Cubans seem reluctant to move without progress in the case of the Cuban Five, who were incarcerated in 1998. They were sent up to the U.S. by the Cuban government to penetrate and develop information about the anti-Castro terrorists groups in Florida after a sequence of bomb attacks against tourist centers in Havana. The idea was then to provide that information to the FBI so that it could take action to halt the exile terrorists. A meeting between representatives of the FBI and the Cubans was held in Havana over several days in June of 1998 and some forty folders of evidence were turned over to the FBI. The Cubans then waited for the U.S. to take action against the terrorists. But none was taken; rather, shortly thereafter, the FBI began arresting the Cuban five. In other words, they arrested those who had provided the evidence rather than the terrorists themselves. The Five were arrested, tried and convicted, though “tried” is not the right word for the trial was a sham. The prosecutors had no real evidence and so fell back on the old standby of trying them for “conspiracy” to commit illegal acts. No evidence, and they were tried in Miami where anti-Castro sentiment had reached such a level with the Elian Gonzalez case that there was no chance of empanelling an impartial jury. Defense lawyers requested a change of venue, but, incredibly, it was denied.



Worst of all was the case of Gerardo Hernandez, who was accused of “conspiracy” to commit murder and given two consecutive life sentences plus fifteen years–this in connection with the shoot down of the two Brothers to the Rescue planes in February of 1996. Never mind that there was no evidence that he was in any way responsible. But there, behind bars, he remains today, mostly in solitary confinement and after all these years not allowed a single visit from his wife.



The injustice in these cases contradicts the reputation of the U.S. for dedication to the rule of law. It must be corrected. Holding these men year after year without real evidence of any crime other than being the unregistered agents of a foreign power was one thing during the Cold War–though unjustified even then. But now, with the Cold War over and every possibility of beginning a new U.S.-Cuba relationship, it becomes morally unjustifiable and counterproductive. It is time surely to undertake a process of reviewing all these cases and then allowing these men to return to their families. One, René Gonzalez, has already been released from prison to serve out his remaining three years on parole, but at the same time, incredibly, not allowed to return to Cuba to be with his wife, who he has not seen in all these years. That, allowing his return, should perhaps be the first step in the process.



And it goes without saying that as the U.S. begins to move in the cases of the Cuban Five, Cuba should release Alan Gross to return to his family.



It should be noted that Alan Gross himself suggested there should be some reciprocal movement in these cases. “Following the recent exchange of the Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, for 1,000 Palestinian prisoners, Gross was clear that he wants the United States and Cuba to make a similar gesture for him and the Cuban Five,” explained Rabbi David Shneyer, who had visited Gross in Havana. [31]



Salim Lamrani, PhD in Iberian and Latin American Studies of the Paris Sorbonne-Paris IV University, is a professor in charge of courses at the Paris-Sorbonne-Paris IV University and the Paris-Est Marne-la- Vallée University. He is a French journalist, and specialist on the Cuba-United States relations. He has recently published: Etat de siege. Les sanctions economiques des Etats-Unis contre Cuba with a prologue by Wayne S. Smith.



Wayne S. Smith, now director of the Cuba Project at the Center for International Policy, was chief of the U.S. Interests Section in Havana, 1979-1982, and is the author of The Closest of Enemies, (New York: W.W. Norton, 1987.



End Notes



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



[1] Jeff Franks, <>, Reuter, October 24, 2010.



[2] Phillip J. Crowley, <>, op. cit.; Saul Landau, <>, Counterpunch, July 30, 2010. http://www.counterpunch.org/landau07302010.html (site consulted on February 18, 2011).



[3] Ibid.



[4] Phillip J. Crowley, <>, op. cit



[5] Paul Haven, <>, The Associated Press, October 18, 2010



[6] Anthony Broadle, <>, Reuters, October 24, 2010.



[7] Juan O. Tamayo, <>, El Nuevo Herald, February 5, 2011.



[8] Andrea Rodríguez, <>, The Associated Press, December 2, 2010.



[9] Jewish Telegraphic Agency, <>, February 6, 2011.



[10] Andrea Rodrígues, <>, The Associated Press, December 2, 2010.



[11] Jeffrey Goldberg, <> The Atlantic, December 7, 2010. http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2010/09/castro-no-one-has-been-slandered-more-than-tthe-jews/62566/ (site consulted on February 18, 2011).



[12] The Associated Press, <>; Juan O. Tamayo, <>, El Nuevo Herald, December 6, 2010.



[13] Comunidad Hebrea de Cuba, <>. http://www.chcuba.org/espanol/ayuda/quienes.htm (site consulted on February 18, 2011).



[14] Arturo López-Levy, <>, August 2010. http://www.thewashintonnote.com/archives/2010/08freeing_alan_gr/ (site consulted on February 18, 2011).



[15] Wayne S. Smith, <>, Center for International Policy, March 2011. http://ciponline.org/pressroom/articles/030411_Smith_Intelligence_Brief_Gross.htm (site consulted on March 13, 2011).



[16] Paul Haven, <>, The Associated Press, February 19, 2010.



[17] Andrea Rodriguez, <>, The Associated Press, December 11, 2010.



[18] Ley de protección de la independencia nacional y la economía de Cuba (LEY N˚. 88), Artículo 11.



[19] U.S. Code, Title 22, Chapter 11, Subchapter II, § 611, iii <>, § 618, a, 1 <>.



[20] Code Penal, Partie legislative, Livre, Titre Ier, Chapitre I, Section 3, Article 411-8.



[21] William Booth, <>, The Associated Press, February 4, 2011.



[22] Paul Haven <>, The Associated Press, February 4, 2011.



[23] Ginger Thompson, <>, The New York Times, October 24, 2010.



[24] Cuban Democracy Act, Titulo XVII, Artículo 1705, 1992.



[25] Along the Malecon, <>, October 25, 2010. http://alongthemalecon.blogspot.com/2010/10/exclusive-q-with-usaid.html (site consulted on October 26, 2010); Tracey Eaton, <>, El Nuevo Herald, December 3, 2010.



[26] Ibid.



[27] Ibid.



[28] Jessica Gresko, <>, The Associated Press, October 26, 2010.



[29] Anthony Boadle, <>, op. cit. ; Jeff Frank, <>, Reuters, October 24, 2010.



[30]Anthony Boadle, <>, op. cit EFE, <>, February 8, 2011.



[31] Agence France Presse, <> November 8, 2011.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Cubans Want Cuban 5 Free


Havana, Dec 5 (Prensa Latina) As part of the World Campaign "Gimme 5 for The Cuban Five," workers, students and other sectors demand on Monday in Havana the release of the Cuban anti-terrorist fighters unjustly serving long sentences in the United States.

Musical meetings, exchanges with relatives of the Cuban Five, as they are universally known, and the launching of books are part of the activities.

On the occasion of Construction Workers´ Day, many workplaces, factories and workshops will receive examples of solidarity with the anti-terrorists, the national trade union of that area stated.

On the fifth of each month, activists in several parts of the planet demand that the United States end what they describe as the injustice in the case of Gerardo Hernandez, Rene Gonzalez, Antonio Guerrero, Ramon Labañino and Fernando Gonzalez, sentenced after infiltrating violent groups operating with impunity against Cuba from Miami.

Recently, in the eastern city of Holguin, 750 kilometers (466 miles) from Havana, more than 300 delegates from 50 countries agreed in a colloquium to increase actions to reveal the situation of the Five and demand of Washington their release and return to the island.

Among measures used is a greater use of social networks, to break the barrier of silence imposed by larger media in the case of the anti-terrorists detained in 1998.

Friday, October 14, 2011

In Spanish: Message of René González to the People of Cuba


«Todavía tenemos cuatro hermanos a los que tenemos que rescatar y que necesitamos que estén junto con nosotros», afirmó René

Juventud Rebelde
digital@juventudrebelde.cu
14 de Octubre del 2011 0:34:37 CDT


(Versiones Taquigráficas del Consejo de Estado)

Estas palabras son para mi pueblo, al que se las debo desde el día en que salí de la cárcel y que no han podido ser enviadas por las circunstancias que rodeaban la necesidad de que tuviéramos un viaje seguro antes de que pudiéramos dirigírselas.

Es difícil, realmente, dirigirse a un pueblo que se quiere tanto y del que uno se siente parte, a través de una cámara, pero necesitaba comunicarme con ustedes y decirles cuánta gratitud tenemos por todo lo que han hecho, explicarles que nos hemos sentido muy acompañados por los miles de mensajes, las cartas de los niños, de todos los colectivos de trabajo y de estudio que desde Cuba nos han enviado sus mensajes, el apoyo que nunca nos ha faltado y que nos ha alimentado en estos años de injusticia, que ya son demasiados.

Para mí este momento de felicidad que compartimos es, sencillamente, un paréntesis en una historia de abusos en la que todavía no se ha hecho un ápice de justicia. El hecho de que yo esté ahora fuera de la cárcel solamente significa que se agotó una avenida de abusos al que había sido sometido; pero todavía tenemos cuatro hermanos a los que tenemos que rescatar y que necesitamos que estén junto con nosotros, con sus familiares; que estén entre ustedes dándoles lo mejor de sí y no en esos lugares en que están, donde se levantan, se despiertan cada mañana, van a un comedor en el que no deben comer, andan entre gente que no deben andar, y realmente necesitamos seguir esta lucha para sacarlos a ellos adelante.

Para mí esto es solamente una trinchera, un lugar nuevo en el que voy a seguir luchando para que se haga justicia y los Cinco podamos regresar junto a ustedes.

Quiero mandar un saludo especial a los familiares de los otros cuatro hermanos, que realmente me han conmovido a través de su alegría. Realmente llega profundo cuando uno habla por teléfono con una persona que sabe que tiene a su hijo preso, a su esposo preso y recibe la libertad mía como si fuera la libertad de uno de los suyos. A mí, realmente, eso me conmueve y me compromete, y tenemos que seguir haciendo esta lucha, porque ellos no merecen estar donde están.

A todo mi pueblo, a todos los que en estos años nos han acompañado en todo el mundo, que han sido miles, a través de los cuales hemos podido poco a poco ir rompiendo este bloqueo informativo, ir rompiendo el silencio que las grandes corporaciones de la prensa han hecho sobre el caso, les extiendo, de parte de los Cinco, mi más profundo agradecimiento, mi compromiso de seguirlos representando a ustedes como se lo merecen, que en definitiva es lo que estamos haciendo los Cinco, porque no somos solamente Cinco, somos un pueblo completo que ha resistido durante 50 años, y gracias a eso es que nosotros estamos resistiendo todavía, porque nos inspiramos en ustedes, porque sabemos que los representamos y nunca les vamos a fallar y siempre estaremos a la altura que ustedes se merecen.

Un abrazo para todos.

Les queremos los Cinco desde dondequiera que estemos.

------

JG: The Cuban Five are the big shame for Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack H. Obama and Yankee Imperialism.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Reclaman a Barack Obama la libertad completa para René González

René González, uno de los cinco antiterroristas cubanos.
Foto: Juventud Rebelde

Juventud Rebelde
digital@juventudrebelde.cu
11 de Octubre del 2011 10:05:46 CDT


Artistas estadounidenses enviaron una carta al presidente Barack Obama para exigir la completa libertad de movimiento del antiterrorista cubano René González, confirmó este martes en un comunicado el Comité Internacional por la Libertad de los Cinco Cubanos, informa PL.

La misiva forma parte de la campaña Actores y Artistas Unidos por la Libertad de los Cinco Cubanos y reclama.

Entre las personalidades que rubricaron el mensaje están Edward Asner, Jackson Browne, Peter Coyote, Héctor Elizondo, Mike Farrell, Richard Foos, Danny Glover, Elliott Gould, Greg Landau, Francisco Letelier, Esai Morales, Michael O Keefe, Bonnie Raitt, Susan Sarandon, Pete Seeger, Andy Spahn y Haskell Wexler.

René González, arrestado en 1998 y sentenciado en 2001 a 15 años bajo cargos de conspiración, salió en libertad el pasado 7 de octubre después de cumplir su sentencia, pero una jueza de Florida le negó permiso para viajar y reunirse con su familia en Cuba.

No solo la orden para que cumpla tres años adicionales bajo libertad supervisada en Estados Unidos es extraordinariamente punitiva, sino que además constituye un insulto gratuito que agrava aún más las ya deterioradas relaciones entre ambos países, recalca la carta.

La decisión suma un mayor dolor a la familia de este hombre pues tendría que prolongarse la separación por tres años más, agrega la nota, citada por el Comité Internacional y fechada en Oakland, California.

Durante los 13 años que René González permaneció en una prisión federal norteamericana, el gobierno de Washington le negó a su esposa Olga Salanueva visas de entrada para visitarlo, recordó la asociación de solidaridad con el pueblo cubano.

La misiva a Obama advierte que si González permanece en Estados Unidos su vida corre peligro ante la agresividad de organizaciones violentas anticubanas asentadas sobre todo en Miami.

Los actores y artistas le preguntan al Presidente: ¿Cómo se garantizará la integridad física de González en medio de un ambiente que genera inseguridad?

El presidente Obama recientemente declaró que está abierto a nuevas relaciones con Cuba. Pues tiene la oportunidad para ello si le permite a González reunirse con su esposa, hijas y padres en Cuba. Sería el tipo de gesto que podría preparar esa nueva relación, afirman los firmantes.

El actor Mike Farrell apuntó: Yo rezo para que el presidente Obama entienda la injusticia cometida contra René González y otros de los Cinco Cubanos en nombre de juegos políticos. González ha cumplido su injusta sentencia y ahora se le debería permitir reunirse con su familia, dijo.

La vida del antiterrorista cubano René González corre grave riesgo si autoridades federales persisten en la decisión de que deberá cumplir un castigo de libertad supervisada en Estados Unidos, alertó también el director de la Revista Areito, Andrés Gómez.

El 16 de septiembre la jueza Joan Lenard, del Tribunal Federal de Distrito del Sur de la Florida, sancionó que González tenía que permanecer tres años adicionales sin salir de este país una vez terminada una condena de 13 años.

Abogados habían solicitado al tribunal que esos tres años González por razones humanitarias pudiera regresar a Cuba para reintegrarse a su familia. El patriota cubano forma parte del grupo conocido internacionalmente como Los Cinco Héroes, junto a Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino, Antonio Guerrero, y Fernando González.

Los Cinco, como identifica la solidaridad internacional a esos luchadores contra el terrorismo, fueron arrestados el 12 de septiembre de 1998 en la ciudad de Miami. Un proceso irregular y viciado celebrado allí los condenó en 2001 a penas que van desde la doble cadena perpetua hasta 15 años.

Friday, September 30, 2011

Caroline Heck-Miller


Fiscal que secuestra a René en Miami es viuda de exoficial de Inteligencia militar, que dio nombre a la operación CIA Peter Pan

JEAN-GUY ALLARD

Caroline Heck-Miller, la fiscal que niega a René González el derecho de regresar a Cuba y que rehusó perseguir a Luis Posada Carriles por terrorismo, es viuda de Gene Miller, un exoficial de Inteligencia militar en la guerra de Corea, anticomunista visceral, que el Miami Herald luego reclutó y quien le puso el nombre de Peter Pan a la operación CIA de rapto de niños cubanos.


Read the Complete Story

Friday, September 16, 2011

Washington Must Allow Rene Gonzalez to Return Home


www.cubasi.com

Written by RHC

The most humane and reasonable solution is that Washington allows Rene Gonzalez, one of the five Cuban anti-terrorist fighters in US jails, to return to Cuba after he meets his prison sentence.

The coordinator of the US National Committee to Free the Five, Gloria La Riva called on Judge Joan Lenard to hear the petition by the defense attorney of Rene, Phil Horowitz, Prensa Latina news agency reported.

Gonzalez will meet a 15-year term in the Florida-based Mariana prison on October 7, but the US justice gave him a three-year probation, which is considered a sanction that adds to the already unjust process against the five Cubans.

Horowitz filed a motion for René to be allowed to serve his three years' probation in Cuba, but the US government has opposed that motion and is currently demanding that Rene serves his probation in Florida, where he has no family.

Rene Gonzalez, along Gerardo Hernandez, Ramon Labañino, Antonio Guerrero and Fernando Gonzalez were arrested in 1998 after they monitored Florida-based ultra-right organizations that have undertaken terrorist actions against Cuba. In 2001, these men, known as the Cuban Five were given extremely long sentences in a biased trial in the city of Miami.