|
IN recent
weeks, there has been an escalation of provocative actions
organized and financed by the United States Interests
Section in Havana. The USIS has increased its
interventionist and illegal activities in our country,
despite the fact that the Cuban government has repeatedly
exposed its role as a mainstay of the U.S. government’s
subversive policies and as the general headquarters of the
internal counterrevolution.
Some of
the most recent actions, encouraged and directly coordinated
by the USIS, include the following:
— The
organization of a Father’s Day activity at the residence of
the head of USIS, during which the U.S. Secretary of
Commerce, Cuban-American Carlos Gutierrez, co-chair of the
commission charged with implementing the anti-Cuba Bush
Plan, addressed a group of counterrevolutionary elements via
videoconference.
— Several
courses held at the USIS for counterrevolutionaries,
self-proclaimed “journalists,” imparted via videoconference
by professors from Florida International University, based
in Miami, which receives official funding from the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID)
specifically for that program.
— Personal
attention from U.S. diplomatic officials, including the USIS
chief, for counterrevolutionary ringleaders, whom they visit
in their own homes and contact semi-secretly in order to
give them instructions.
—The
conveyance of direct instructions from USIS diplomatic
personnel to mercenaries, so that they will step up their
subversive actions, including inciting them to carry out
provocative actions on public streets and symbolic places
like the Plaza de la Revolución.
— The
opportunities given to mercenary individuals to have
permanent access to USIS Internet centers as well as being
constantly supplied with money, cell phones, communications
equipment, computers and counterrevolutionary propaganda,
among others.
The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs has confirmed information that
the USIS is planning to organize other illegal activities,
and is instigating its mercenaries in Cuba to carry out
provocative actions in public streets around the 4th of
July, which is Independence Day in the United States.
These
activities also coincide with the end of Mr. Michael
Parmly’s mission in Cuba and his definitive departure from
our country. He is the head of the U.S. Interests Section,
the man whose scandalous and illegal conduct was revealed
this past May by the Cuban government, when it was proved
that he — along with other U.S. diplomats — was connected
with and directly participated in bringing money from
Cuban-born terrorist Santiago Álvarez Fernández-Magriñá to
counterrevolutionary factions in Cuba.
This
escalation represents the most recent example of the
desperation of the U.S. administration, which, frustrated by
the repeated failure of its policy for isolating Cuba, is
intensifying provocations and subversion.
The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs once again denounces the illegal
conduct of the U.S. Interests Section in Cuba, which is not
only a flagrant violation of the bilateral agreement that
provided for the establishment of that Office, but Cuban
laws and international norms endorsed by the 1961 Vienna
Convention on Diplomatic Relations, to which the United
States is a signatory.
This
Ministry accuses the U.S. government of concocting and
encouraging these and other counterrevolutionary
provocations, which are an intrinsic part of its subversive
policies and its strategy aimed at overthrowing the Cuban
Revolution.
The Cuban
government calls upon the U.S. government to answer for
these and other actions, and demands a definitive end to the
interventionist activities of the USIS encouraging,
organizing, directing, financing and monitoring the internal
counterrevolution.
The Cuban
government clearly reiterates that it will not tolerate a
continuation of these illegal provocations and actions,
instigated by the U.S. administration through its diplomatic
officials in Havana, and it holds the U.S. government
responsible for any consequences resulting from its
response.
Havana, July 2, 2008 |