Terrorist Posada
Carriles is a danger to the world
TERRORIST Luis Posada Carriles, detained in the
United States, is a danger to the world and should
be extradited to Venezuela, affirmed participants in
the televised Cuban "Roundtable" program on Monday
evening, AIN reports.
Panelists explained that the petition by Posada’s
lawyer, Eduardo Soto, for his client’s immigration
hearing to be transferred to Miami has been denied,
and the hearing postponed until June 24 in El Paso,
Texas, where the criminal is currently being held.
The US Attorney General handed over to the judge
a thick file documenting Posada’s activities, and
the Sun-Sentinel newspaper stated in an
editorial that the U.S. should investigate the
accusations against him and bring federal charges if
warranted, the panelists noted.
On August 29, there will be a hearing to clarify
the criminal’s residence status. His lawyer, after
requesting political asylum for his client, is now
incongruently claiming that Posada has US residency,
in spite of having lived outside the country for 28
years.
Soto himself admits that his client worked 20
years for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and
was a US Rangers captain, and intends to base his
claims of residency on that, even though implicitly,
he would then be admitting to having participated in
the terrorist acts attributed to him.
On June 15, Venezuela presented the United States
with a 520-page report containing evidence of the
crimes committed by Posada to back the formal
extradition application based on a treaty signed by
both countries in 1922.
Cuban attorney José Pertierra, who is based in
Miami, said in a telephone interview that legally,
Posada does not have the right to protection under
US immigration laws, and he reiterated that the
terrorist is a danger to the world and to the United
States itself.
Nevertheless, he cited precedents such as that of
terrorist Orlando Bosch, who in spite of his
criminal record, was paroled by George Bush senior
when he was president, and since then Bosch has
resided in Miami.
Those who helped Posada to illegally enter the
United States participated in serious crimes
punishable under US law, Pertierra affirmed, and
compared it to someone helping Bin Laden to do the
same.
The attorney noted that in the U.S, different
rules are applied to Cuban Mafiosi, implicitly
referring to the complicity of these with US
authorities, particularly with the fraudulent help
given to George W. Bush in gaining the presidency.
Andrés Gómez, president of the Antonio Maceo
Brigade in the U.S, offered his testimony regarding
a third demonstration by Cubans residing in Miami to
demand Posada’s extradition, held last Saturday and
covered by television news reporters and other local
media.
The panelists also reported on statements made by
US politicians and members of Congress who support
the terrorist’s extradition, as well as echoes in
the international media of the International
Conference against Terrorism, for Truth and Justice
that was recently held in Havana.