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THIS May 8
marks one year since the definitive liberation of terrorist
Luis Posada Carriles in the United States.
At the
time, that was the ruling of Judge Kathleen Cardone, who
threw out the charges brought against Posada by the U.S.
government. The terrorist had been accused solely of
committing fraud and lying to the Immigrations and Customs
Enforcement authorities in order to obtain naturalization in
that country. The judge said at the time, "The realm of this
case is not, as some have suggested, terrorism," she wrote.
"It is immigration fraud. Terrorism, and the determination
as to whether or not to classify an individual as a
terrorist, lies within the sound discretion of the executive
branch."
The U.S.
government has not charged Posada for his acts of terrorism
even though it has all the evidence based on its
longstanding relationship with him, along with what Cuba has
provided since 1998.
Paradoxically, it was Judge Cardone herself who, in one of
her initial rulings, highlighted the fact that he is a
dangerous terrorist and even listed part of the string of
crimes committed by this sinister individual.
Judge
Cardone noted Posada’s participation in some of the most
repugnant actions of the 20th century. The long list
includes the Iran-Contra scandal, the bombing of Cubana
Airlines Flight 455, the detonation of bombs in Havana
tourist sites in 1997 and plans to assassinate President
Fidel Castro in Panama, in 2000.
The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs denounces the conspiratorial
inaction by the United States government and the protection
given to Luis Posada Carriles by the administration of
George W. Bush.
While
insisting on presenting itself as the leader of its
self-proclaimed "war on terrorism," the U.S. government
continues to ignore a request to extradite Posada submitted
on June 15, 2005 by the government of the Bolivarian
Republic of Venezuela.
President
George W. Bush refuses to try him for what he really is, a
terrorist, and in doing so he is shamelessly violating his
own laws and international obligations. Once again, he is
demonstrating his personal commitment to the Cuban-American
mafia of Miami.
The
release of the terrorist and former agent of the Central
Intelligence Agency shows that his banal trial in the United
States is a farce.
Ridiculous
and shameful efforts by U.S. prosecutors to repeatedly delay
the immigration fraud case constitute a legal
procrastination maneuver that is blocking justice, postponed
for an extraordinarily long time in this matter.
It poses a
marked contrast with the ferocious attitude of those same
prosecutors in the case of our five heroes, anti-terrorist
fighters, several of whom were given life sentences after a
shady trial carried out in a biased courtroom in Miami.
Meanwhile,
the terrorist’s lawyers are being given innumerable
extensions to continue the infinite immigration case, which
does not guarantee any punishment, however small, for the
freed terrorist.
Equally
benign treatment has been given to terrorists Santiago
Álvarez, Osvaldo Mitat and Ernesto Abreu. They were
sentenced on February 11 by Judge David Briones to 10, eight
and two months of prison, respectively, for refusing to
testify against Posada after smuggling him into the United
States aboard a boat, the Santrina.
It is the
same with the cases of his accomplices, Rubén López Castro
and José Pujol, who were sentenced by Cardone for the same
reason on March 17 to 10 and three months in prison and
fines of $500 and $250, respectively.
The
peaceful life being led by terrorist Luis Posada Carriles in
Miami, guaranteed by the U.S. government, comes in addition
to a long list of abuses, violations and atrocities for
which the Bush administration will be remembered.
How could
anyone forget its secret abductions of individuals all over
the world and its approval of torture, all under the pretext
of the fight against terrorism?
With only
nine months left of this administration, it is becoming
clear that its legacy in the fight against terrorism will be
one of hypocrisy and an absence of political will to combat
it whenever it is inconvenient for U.S. political interests.
The
impunity assured to Luis Posada Carriles by the U.S.
government is further proof of our own country’s need to
defend itself against anti-Cuban terrorism, originating and
financed in the United States.
September
12 of this year will mark 10 years that our five heroes have
spent in U.S. prisons, unjustly and cruelly locked up for
having combated terrorism.
The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs reaffirms that the Cuban people
will continue demanding justice against the criminal.
Havana,
April 16, 2008
Translated by Granma International |