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Terrorist
plot to destabilize Cuba
• Seven
acts of terrorism in the past seven months as a
consequence of the Cuban Adjustment Act and the
tolerance of U.S. authorities • The blockade has
cost Cuba over $70 billion USD
THE
head of the United States Interests Section is at
the forefront of a conscious plan to stimulate
illegal emigration via acts of terrorism with the
objective of casting aside the migratory agreements
between the two countries and creating a chaotic
situation. The objective is to stimulate mass
migration, obliging Washington to take aggressive
action to avoid it. The granting of visas has
decreased to 2.5% of the minimum volume allowed in
the agreement.
All
these actions, sponsored by U.S. tolerance and the
indiscriminate application of the Cuban Adjustment
Act, have led to seven registered aircraft and
maritime vessel hijackings in the last seven months,
all serious acts of terrorism where the protagonists
used violence and placed hundreds of people, a large
number of them women and children, in great danger.
The
Cuban authorities have revealed that these
incidents, directed at utilizing illegal emigration
to the United States, are part of a conscious plan.
It is
worth recalling that the migratory agreement signed
by the governments of both countries states:
"would-be immigrants rescued at sea attempting
to reach the United States will not be allowed to
enter." Similarly, "both governments will
take effective measures to oppose and prevent the
use of violence by persons trying to reach, or who
succeed in reaching, the United States from Cuba by
forcefully diverting aircraft and maritime
vessels."
Nevertheless,
the U.S. authorities have accepted and even released
the perpetrators of such crimes involving violence
and the use of firearms, grenades and knives,
punishable under international law, to which the
United States supposedly adheres.
During
a press conference, Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe
Pérez Roque recalled that in four of the recent
cases, hijackers who committed acts of terrorism are
now at liberty, as has occurred in Miami, where
individuals who killed to divert vessels and
aircraft are also on the street. Likewise roaming
free in that city is Orlando Bosch, one of the main
authors of the mid-air explosion of a Cubana
Aviation passenger liner over Barbados, a criminal
act that killed the 73 passengers and crew on board.
It was
also demonstrated that James Cason, head of the U.S.
Interests Section in Havana, has intensified his
activities with dissident elements in the hope of
creating a fifth column on the island to undertake
counterrevolutionary activities in line with the
Helms-Burton Act, which promotes subversion on the
island. As part of those plans, he was responsible
for delivering money and items to those people, as
was proven in the summary procedure trial against 75
detainees, sentenced to prison terms ranging from
six to 28 years.
All
the judicial processes were instructed with a penal
nature in virtue of Law number 5 of 1977 and the
Criminal Proceedings Law of 1973, which dates back
to the Criminal Prosecution Law established in the
Spanish colony in 1888.
Those
accused were participating in conspiratorial
meetings with Cason, receiving money and delivering
distorted information for the application of the
Helms-Burton Act, which intensifies a blockade of
Cuba that has cost the country some $70 billion USD.
The U.S. foreign aid agency USAID assigned $22
million USD from 1997 for subversion in Cuba. Of
that total, more than $8 million was sent in 2002.
THE
MOST RECENT ACTS OF TERRORISM
On
March 18, a DC-3 passenger plane traveling from the
Isle of Youth to Havana with 37 people aboard was
hijacked by six individuals armed with knives, who
forced the pilots to fly the plane to the United
States. On March 31, a terrorist armed with grenades
hijacked an AN-22 aircraft covering the same route,
this time carrying 40 adults and six children, and
demanded that the pilots redirect the flight to the
United States. Both aircraft were confiscated there.
A
little over 24 hours later, on April 2, the
hijacking of one of the passenger ferries used to
transport people from Havana to the suburb of
Casablanca occurred.
At
knife- and gunpoint, the terrorists took the ferry
to 30 miles off the Cuba coast where the vessel ran
out of fuel with 34 passengers and crew aboard.
They
demanded a new vessel so they could continue towards
Florida; if their request was not met they would
begin throwing hostages into the sea, which at that
point and location had reached force four.
As is
the normal practice, the Cuban Border Patrol
reported the case to the U.S. Coast Guard service,
which responded that it was not prepared to act in
this case, as it had always done in the past.
Cuban
Border Patrol units stayed close to the ferry and
continued negotiations with the terrorists in the
hope of convincing them to abandon their plans.
Finally, the ferry was towed back to the port of
Mariel, where the hijackers continued to demand fuel
in exchange for the hostages’ lives, until two of
them (French tourists) jumped overboard and made it
possible for Cuban special forces to board the ferry
and capture the terrorists.
DEATH
PENALTY FOR THREE ASSAILANTS
Summoned
before the Crimes against State Security courtroom
in City of Havana People’s Court, three of the
assailants were given the death penalty, four were
sentenced to life imprisonment and the others
received various prison terms.
Those
accused were answering charges for the hijacking and
attempted violent rerouting to the United States of
the Baraguá ferry. This hijacking was accompanied
by extreme violence and death threats to the crew
and passengers on board the ferry in service in the
Bay of Havana, and seriously endangered the lives of
dozens of people taken hostage who were at the point
of perishing when, 30 miles from our coast, the
vessel, designed for navigating in off-shore waters,
ran out of fuel in a force-four sea and could easily
have sunk before the arrival of the Border Patrol
units to lend assistance.
The
Court applied the summary proceedings system laid
down in Articles 479 and 480 of the Criminal Law
Proceedings, with full respect for the guarantees
and basic rights of the accused. The three men given
the death sentence were allocated the immediate
recourse of appeal to the People’s Supreme Court,
the maximum justice agency, which duly held a new
trial in which the sentence was ratified.
The
maximum penalty sentences were subsequently
officially referred to the consideration of the
Council of State. During a lengthy meeting called to
this effect the collective discussed in all detail
the proven facts giving rise to the sentence, the
gravity of the same, and the potential danger they
implied for both the lives of a large number of
innocent persons and for the security of the
country, subjected to a sinister plan of
provocations hatched by the most extremist sectors
of the U.S. government and its allies among the
Miami terrorist mafia, with the sole objective of
creating conditions and pretexts for attacking our
homeland, which will be defended at any price
necessary. The Council of State viewed the sentences
as absolutely just and the decisions of both courts
in strict adherence to the laws, and ratified the
sentences.
On
April 8, at a Revolutionary Armed Forces fuel
reserve depot in the village of La Fe on the Isle of
Youth, five individuals stole an AK-M rifle from a
guard undertaking military service. Some hours
later, four of the assailants were captured close to
the airport. In the getaway vehicle, the authorities
seized the stolen weapon plus three magazines, two
knives and exercise weights. The plan was to board
the last remaining flight of the day, taking the
passengers and crew hostage and forcing them to fly
to the United States.
Abrupt
reduction of visas
ACCORDING
to the Migration Agreement signed between both
countries, the government of the United States is
committed to granting 20,000 emigrant visas per
year.
Each
year of the agreement commences on October 1.
Between October 1 and February 28, the first five
months of the current period, Washington has granted
505 visas. During the same period last year 7,237
visas were granted; in 2001, over 8,300; in 2000,
10,860; and in 1999 some 11,600 Cubans received
visas and emigrated to the United States.
"What
does this abrupt reduction in visas, in plain
violation of the Migratory Agreement, imply? Why is
the U.S. government not meeting its commitment? Why
have five months passed during which nothing like
10,000 (half the total of) Cubans have been granted
visas but instead barely 2.5% of the total visas
agreed have been conceded? These questions were
posed by Foreign Minister Felipe Pérez Roque during
his press conference on April 9.
In the
press conference the Cuban government revealed
documentary evidence in the form of checks received
by State Security agents and statements by those
Cuban agents who infiltrated the dissident groups.
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