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Dear
compañeras and compañeros:
We
arrive at the 10th anniversary of the arrest of the Cuban
Five at a crucial moment of our legal process (That is what
they call it, although perhaps “illegal process” would be
more appropriate.) The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, based
in Atlanta, has just ended our appeal.
That is
to say, if it were up to them, things would stand as is, and
some day my bones would be sent to Cuba, after death frees
me from two life sentences.
The
court in question has given unmistakable signals of the type
of “justice” that the Five can aspire to in this country.
When there was a decision 3-to-0 in our favor, with 93 pages
of solid arguments in which the three-judge panel
characterized our trial as “The Perfect Storm,” the full
panel, against all predictions, not only agreed to review
the decision, but reversed it without much explanation. The
“perfect storm” quickly became simply a drizzle.
Yet,
this time, when the decision was 2-1 against the Five, with
obvious legal errors, with a judge arguing in 16 pages that
the prosecution presented absolutely no proof that sustains
the charge of conspiracy to commit murder, and with a judge
who—although voting against us—recognized that it is a “very
close case,” and with several defense arguments were not
even seriously analyzed, the 11th Circuit categorically
refused to review it.
As we
say in Cuba: “Not even water is as clear.” We have said time
and again that this is a political case, and those who do
not see it as such, choose not to see it.
Someone
recently mentioned that now the Supreme Court has the last
word. I would say, the second-to-last word. The final word
in the case of the Cuban Five rests with you, our sisters
and brothers of Cuba, the United States and the whole world,
who throughout all these years have been our principal
source of encouragement. Our hopes are not placed in any
court. Ten years are more than enough to have cured us of
any such naïve notion.
You are
our hope, who through sacrifice and swimming against the
current, have succeeded in making people on all continents
aware of the injustice committed against the Five. You are
the ones who are not taking time out or resting in your
homes but instead are honoring us with your presence in
different activities, commemorating the 10th anniversary of
our imprisonment. You continue struggling to unmask the
double standard of a government that invades other countries
to supposedly fight terrorism, at the same time that it
harbors and protects infamous terrorists, and imprisons
those who are trying to stop those criminal acts.
We have
confidence in you to expose the hypocrisy of the corporate
media and of certain international organizations, which
portray mercenaries—who betray our people for a handful of
dollars or a visa—as suffering political prisoners. Yet they
are disgracefully silent in the case of two women who have
been deprived for a decade of the basic right to visit their
husbands in prison.
We know
that right is on our side, but to win true justice we need a
jury of millions of people throughout the world, and we need
you, defenders of just causes, to make our truth known.
The
injustice committed against the Five has kept us away from
our homeland for ten years, but it has not kept us from
accompanying our people through joyful times and also the
suffering. A few days ago Hurricane Gustav caused great
damage in Cuba, mainly on the Isle of Youth and in Pinar del
Río, two territories from where we have received a multitude
of support and love all these years.
We are
certain that all the people of Pinar del Río and Isle of
Youth, together with local and national leadership, with the
solidarity of all dignified Cubans and many friends of the
world, will become stronger in these difficult moments
and—as is characteristic of revolutionaries—will convert the
setbacks into victory. Although it is not possible for us to
be there physically, today more than ever the Cuban Five are
with you in our hearts, with our brothers and sisters in the
Isle of Youth and Pinar del Río, who have done so much to
support the struggle for our liberation.
Compañeras y compañeros: Ten years after that September 12,
1998, we thank you once again for walking this long and
rough road together with us. We know, that to continue this
march, we can keep counting on you, and you can also always
count on our firm determination to resist, with our heads
held high, for as long as it takes.
¡Hasta
la Victoria Siempre!
Gerardo
Hernández Nordelo
Victorville Federal Prison, California
September, 2008 |