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PANAMA, June 30 (PL).— The Supreme Court of Panama issued a
unanimous ruling on Monday stating that several presidential
pardons issued by former President Mireya Moscoso in August
2004 were unconstitutional.
Moscoso passed decrees releasing Luis Posada Carriles and
three other Cuban-born accomplices involved in an
assassination plot against Cuban President Fidel Castro. The
four terrorists now operate from the United States.
A
press note read on the evening TV stated that the Supreme
Court judges had declared three of the decrees—issued on
August 25, 26 and 30, 2004— invalid, ordering the criminal
processes against the men be reinstated.
Moscoso released the men just days before current President
Martin Torrijos took over the presidential mandate.
Posada Carriles, who wasn’t mentioned in the press note, was
arrested in Panama in November 2000 during the Ibero-American
Summit when he and his accomplices were planning to
assassinate Fidel Castro at an address at the University of
Panama.
The presidential pardon set off a wave of popular
indignation and lawsuits filed by Attorney General Jose
Antonio Sossa; the mayor of Panama City, Juan Carlos
Navarro; and former public prosecutor Gerardo Solis.
After his release, Posada Carriles entered the United States
where he lives in freedom in Miami. Among the numerous
crimes to which he has confessed was the October 6, 1976
midair bombing of a Cuban passenger plane off the coast of
Barbados killing all 73 persons on board.
Granma
01-07-2008 |