Log in

View Full Version : Intl campaign demands family visits for Cuban 5



Communist
25th February 2010, 03:51
.
Int’l campaign demands family visits for Cuban Five (http://www.workers.org/2010/us/cuban_five_0304/)

By Teresa Gutierrez
Feb 24, 2010

http://www.workers.org/2006/us/cuban5_200.jpg

More than 10 years ago, the U.S. government jailed five Cubans after one of the most unjust and ludicrous trials that has ever occurred in this country.

Many people, especially people of color, are behind jail doors unfairly in this country. Many of them are innocent or never had a fair day in court, to say the least.

But the case of the Cuban Five — like that of Mumia Abu-Jamal, Leonard Peltier and the Puerto Rican political prisoners — stands out as one of the most insidious acts of injustice ever perpetrated by U.S. imperialism.

The Cuban government was forced to send Cubans to Florida to monitor the actions of the far-right-wing Cubans who have carried out a U.S.-promoted, nonstop war of aggression against Cuba for more than 50 years. This war includes violent acts of terror, such as the bombing of tourist sites and assassination attempts, all with the knowledge and complicity of the U.S.

The Cuban government informed the U.S. government of the presence of the Cuban Five in the U.S. It even gave the U.S. government some of the dangerous information the Five had gathered. But instead of working with Cuba to prevent acts of terror against the island nation, the U.S. arrested the Five.

A sham of a trial occurred in a city where not even the Latin Grammys could take place if Cubans from Cuba were performing. How could a fair trial occur in such a partisan and venomous city?

It could not. The Cuban Five have been in federal prison since 1998. They must be freed.

A national and international campaign to free them continues. Today that campaign is specifically addressing the issue of family visits for the Five.

The International Committee for the Freedom of the Cuban Five, as part of its International Campaign for the Right of Family Visits, announced last week that key voices from Argentina have joined the demand for humanitarian visas for Olga Salanueva and Adriana Pérez, the spouses of Cuban Five members René González and Gerardo Hernández, respectively.

The announcement states, “Argentinean personalities have sent a letter to Hillary Clinton and Janet Napolitano demanding visas for two Cuban women so they can visit their husbands imprisoned in the United States for more than 11 years.”

The letter, which was delivered Feb. 16 to the U.S. Embassy in Buenos Aires, is signed by Nobel Peace recipient Adolfo Pérez Esquivel; Estela de Carlotto, president of Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo; Nora Cortiñas, Mother of Plaza de Mayo — Founder Line; writer and journalist Stella Calloni; Graciela Rosemblum, president of the Human Rights Argentinean League; jurists Beinusz Szmukler and Carlos Zamorano; Fray Antonio Puigjané; Capuchino Priest; sociologist Atilio Borón; and philosopher León Rozichtner.

“The signers denounced the United States for violating the right of family visits and for denying visas to the wives of Gerardo Hernández, serving two life sentences, and René González, serving 15 years.

“In the letter, which can be seen on several websites, signers asked: ‘Where is justice and the sense of humanity in the U.S.?’”

For a full list of the letter’s signers, or to find out more about the Five, visit www.thecuban5.org (http://www.thecuban5.org) or e-mail info(AT)thecuban5.org ([email protected]).

The International Committee is urging everyone to send letters, faxes, e-mails or make a phone call to contacts listed below. Ask them to do the following:

1) Immediately grant a humanitarian visa to Adriana Pérez to visit her husband, Gerardo Hernández, in prison and end the violation of the right of family visits.

2) Grant multiple visas to all family members of the Cuban Five so they can visit their imprisoned loved ones in the U.S.

U.S. State Department
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
2201 C Street, NW
Washington, DC 20520
Fax: 02-647-2283
Phone: 202-647-4000

Janet Napolitano
U.S. Depart. of Homeland Security
Washington, DC 20528
Fax: 202-282-8401
Phone: 202-282-8000
Comment line: 202-282-8495

____________________________________




Articles copyright 1995-2010 Workers World (http://www.workersworld.net/wwp/pmwiki.php/Main/AboutThisSite).
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire
article is permitted in any medium without
royalty provided this notice is preserved.

Communist
2nd March 2010, 00:15
.
BBC News breaks silence on the Five

http://web.mail.com/30746-111/mmc-2/en-us/mail/get-attachment.aspx?uid=1.28378150&folder=Inbox&partId=24

BBC television news broadcast a rare television news report on the Cuban Five (known as the Miami 5 in the UK) as part of a series of reports from the island on 24 February.

The report featured an interview with Miami Five prisoner Rene Gonzalez, and his wife Olga Salanueva who has not seen her husband for almost ten years as the US government continues to deny her a visa to visit him.

The BBC has covered the case before, in January 2008 by running a radio interview with lawyer Leonard Weinglass, one of the defense team, and in July 2007, BBC World Service interviewed Gerardo Gonzalez, another one of the five Cubans unjustly imprisoned in the US for fighting terrorist attacks against Cuba.

However, this report was the first time the case had been reported on national BBC television news in such detail.

________________________________

Viewpoint: Cuban Five (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8537932.stm)
The case of the 'Cuban Five'

Rene Gonzalez is one of the so-called Cuban Five, a group of agents sent to the US by Cuba to infiltrate Cuban exile groups Havana says were plotting attacks against the Castro government.

The five were arrested in Miami in 1998 and found guilty of infiltrating US military bases and Cuban exile groups, and passing the information to Cuba.

Mr Gonzalez was jailed for 15 years. Havana says the Cuban Five are political prisoners and is lobbying the Obama administration for their release.

However, the US Supreme Court ruled last year that it will not consider the case, ending their hopes of an appeal.

Mr Gonzalez spoke to the BBC in a rare interview from his prison cell in Marianna, Florida.

Here are excerpts of what he told the BBC's Matt Frei.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/img/66a.gif I came into contact with some of the organisations in Miami who had been doing violent activities for years against the Cuban government. I went to Brothers to the Rescue (a US-based organisation of Cubans opposed to Fidel Castro's government) and another one ... organisations with beautiful names but bent on committing violent activities against Cuba… My role was to inform the Cuban government what they were doing.

We don't like to use the term spying because that term is easy to be manipulated. When it comes to the law, spying is to go after government secrets ... I would say that I was working undercover with some criminal organizations.

It is unfair to keep someone in prison for fighting terrorism. I have been informing to my government on terrorist activities and all of a sudden I find myself facing a 15 year sentence! It would be crazy if it wasn't so politically charged.

Wife denied visa to visit

My wife hasn't seen me for eight years and Gerardo's wife hasn't seen him for 12 and that is one of the most cruel endeavours that the US government has taken against us.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46883000/jpg/_46883043_008189201-1.jpg
The men are considered national heroes in Cuba

I don't know, maybe they're trying to break our marriages in order to break our spirits. It is very cruel. The last time I saw her was my birthday in 2000, and for Gerardo, the last time was 1997 or 1998.

She's applied about eight times ... she's been denied eight times. The reasons vary but they basically say that it is a national security threat."

Prison life then and now

Right after our arrest, we were in solitary confinement … it was very rough treatment back then. It was part of the whole setup in order to try to break us down. That lasted for 17 months, but that's part of the past and I suppose that's how they view their jobs in regard to softening us up for the trial. Then we went to the regular facilities and so far I can't complain about that.

I do a lot of exercising. I have a job in the recreation yard. When I finish I exercise. I run. Then I go back to my cell and do a lot of reading. I took a course in Economics from Havana University. I feel I am making the best of my time here.

I treat everyone with fairness and I receive the same treatment. Some prisoners are more politically aware than others - they approach me and ask me questions and try to understand my point.

Obama and US-Cuba relations

There was a time when I had some hopes, because of the way he spoke and how he handled himself. But the way I see it from here, he has been a little bit hypersensitive to the right wing of this country. And right now I don't see any improvement.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44718000/jpg/_44718499_cubanspies_afp226b.jpg (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8537932.stm)
Posters of the five can be seen in Havana

They are asking the Cuban government to give concessions that we cannot give… we don't impose any conditions on your government to improve relations. What we want is to have a normal relationship by respecting everybody's system. We don't try to topple their government, we don't apply pressure for regime change in the US. We have our own form of government and they should respect that.

My generation grew up witnessing years of aggression coming from the US - we're talking about terrorism, bombings, shootings - so my generation understands very well that we have the right to defend Cuba from all those crimes. So it is not only the Cuban government but the whole society that understands our cause.

And nobody in Cuba would agree to any re-establishing of normal relations with a country that has five of their sons in jail for defending the country.


Watch the video report in full on the BBC website (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8537932.stm)