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Cuban Five Saga Continues.

 

ELSON CONCEPCION

FORMER US ATTORNEY GENERAL RAMSEY CLARK NOTED THE GROWING SUPPORT FOR THE CAUSE OF THE CUBAN FIVE.

In reviewing what took place Monday at the Cuban Five’s appeal hearing in Atlanta, attorney Roberto Gonzalez said the campaign to secure their release must continue until they return home.

Roberto, brother of Cuban Five member Rene Gonzalez, was at the hearing where the growing support for the cause was more than evident. He spoke Tuesday on the Cuban TV program The Round Table.

Gonzalez said the defense team did a good job in presenting its arguments and he highlighted the presence of 73 personalities from around the world on hand to witness the hearing.

Their presence helps break the wall of silence the US government has tried to maintain on the Cuban Five case, said the attorney. He said the three judge panel listened to the 27 objections lodged by the defense that marked the improper behavior of the government in the 2001 trial against the Cubans.

"There was no information involving the national security of the United States, nor request for information that had to do with national defense," noted Gonzalez, "So where’s the conspiracy? There’s no evidence."

Addressing the Round Table audience by telephone, defense attorney Paul McKenna referred to the direct questions asked by the judges at Monday’s hearing on the supposed proof that Gerardo Hernandez was involved in the downing of the planes (for which he received a double life sentence). McKenna said the prosecution had no response.

"I felt that the magistrates saw the errors committed by the prosecution," he concluded.

Ramsey Clark, a former US attorney general, was also present at the hearing in Atlanta. He stressed by telephone the support for the Cuban Five expressed by the presidents of major lawyers associations from several countries, present in Atlanta, and many people from the US.

A country that wants to eradicate terrorism can not arrest the people that are fighting against terrorism, said Clark. He further noted that the arguments presented by the government were especially weak.

Arrested in September 1998, the Cuban Five have spent nearly nine years in prison after a politically charged trial in Miami that broke most established legal norms. Without presenting evidence, the prosecution obtained a guilty verdict on espionage and conspiracy charges. Harsh sentences were dished out against the men who had penetrated Miami-based terrorist groups to inform on their plots against Cuba.

(Granma) 22-08-2007

 
Cuban 5 lawyers optimistic.
 

Paul Mackena, US lawyer of Antonio Guerrero, one of the five Cuban anti-terrorist fighters unfairly imprisoned in United States, said he was optimistic with results of the hearing where the case of the group was analyzed.

"I am happy with the team that made the presentation," stated Tuesday the defense team lawyer who remanded a new trial in the Monday oral account before three judges assigned by the US Court of Appeals 11th Circuit in Atlanta.

After the 2001 process in Miami, Fernando Gonzalez, Gerardo Hernandez, Antonio Guerrero, Rene Gonzalez and Ramon Labanino, universally known by the Cuban Five, were condemned to harsh sentences ranging from 15 years to double life imprisonment.

"I think the most important fact were the questions formulated by the judges to prosecutors for evidences proving Gerardo Hernandez, sentenced to double life imprisonment, conspired to commit crimes," the lawyer said on a phone call during the Cuban roundtable TV program.

On the other hand, Roberto Gonzalez, lawyer of the group and Rene's brother, talked of having had a very comforting personal sensation related to the presence of important international figures in that court.

Gonzalez, who attended the Cuban TV program as a panelist, said the Five's defense team requested for a new trial, not only for the location, but also for the US government's bad behavior during the trial.

On August 20, the Cuban Five defense team presented their arguments before three judges from the Atlanta Court of Appeals.

(Prensa Latina) 22-08-2007

 
Italian Jurist Blasts Injustice in Cuban Five Case.
 
Italian attorney Fabio Marcelli.

Italian attorney Fabio Marcelli participated as an observer at the oral hearing held Monday in the appeal of the Cuban Five; he said that if the case was purely a legal matter the defense would surely win.

The representative of the International Association of Democratic Jurists said the defense did a good job arguing its points and came out strengthened in its legal stance seeking justice.

In statements to Juventud Rebelde newspaper, Marcelli said the panel of magistrates at the Atlanta Appeals Court was comprised by two judges that already showed their objectivity when they previously said the Cuban Five’s convictions should be overturned.

However, the highly politicized nature of the 2001 trial held in Miami against Rene Gonzalez, Ramon Labañino, Gerardo Hernandez, Antonio Guerrero and Fernando Gonzalez, weighs heavy, said Marcelli.

Three plus years after their detention in September 1998, the five Cubans were convicted on trumped up charges including espionage and conspiracy and were handed extremely harsh sentences.

Marcelli said there is no time limit on the court to make a ruling on the appeal. He noted that in the past the court has taken from 6 to 17 months to make a ruling.

He said the foot dragging is a negative aspect of the US legal system and another violation of the rights of the accused.

Marcelli criticized the attitude of US authorities who believe there is such a thing as good terrorism when it serves their objectives, in contradiction to the expectations of the international community.

Referring to the limitations established by the US government on the visitation rights of the Cuban Five, Marcelli said this represents a real form of torture.

The member of the International Association of Democratic Jurists said the defense team was severely hampered in representing its clients, a clear violation as the panel itself recognized.

Marcelli added that the organization he represents promotes the participation of jurists as international observers in the case, while also proposing a conference on the issue in which aspects of international law would be presented.

The Italian recalled that in 2005 a three-judge panel of the same appeals court overturned the sentences and ordered a new trial, a ruling that was then overturned in 2006 on a 10-2 vote by the full court after a prosecution appeal.

The ruling that would have meant a new trial, together with the opinion of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detentions, should have obliged the US authorities to release the Cuban Five, but they remain behind bars. (PL)

(Prensa Latina) 22-08-2007

 

 


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