Statement from
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
GERARDO
Hernández Nordelo, Hero of the Republic of Cuba and
one of the five anti-terrorist fighters unjustly
incarcerated in the United States, has just been
subjected to another arbitrary act on the part of
authorities in this country, intended to obstruct
his due legal process.
Last Saturday, July 7, Cuban
officials authorized by the Department of State to
make a consular visit to Gerardo were unable to do
so, on the alleged argument that the memorandum from
the governor of Victorville Penitentiary in
California approving their entry into the prison,
was not available in reception. This argument
particularly stands out given that, aside from the
authorization procedures for the visit completed by
the Cuban Interests Section in Washington with the
Department of State, Gerardo himself had reconfirmed
with prison authorities that everything was in order.
Additionally, on July 9, Martin
Garbus, one of Gerardo’s defense lawyers, who had
organized a legal visit to review with him documents
related to the current collateral appeal process,
was unable to do so, on the same pretext that the
that the memorandum from the prison governor was not
in reception. Garbus was finally able to see
Gerardo, thanks to the fact that his name was on his
visitors’ list, but given the conditions of the type
of visit he was authorized, which was not of a legal
nature, he could not take into the prison the
documentation that our hero needed to read and sign,
or meet with him in appropriate conditions.
This is not the first time that such
events have taken place. They have occurred
systematically at each key point of Gerardo’s
process. Just to cite a few examples, in 2010,
during the collateral appeal preparatory phase known
as habeas corpus, on two occasions the prison
authorities denied Gerardo visits from his lawyer
Leonard Weinglass and deliberately delayed giving
him his legal correspondence, which prevented him
from having an active part in reviewing it. In March
of 2003, Gerardo was placed in solitary confinement
prior to the lodging of his direct appeal.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs
denounces this new obstructionist maneuver on the
part of U.S. authorities, directed at obstructing
Gerardo’s appeal process, thus depriving him of one
of the few rights he has as a prisoner in the United
States.
Gerardo has been placed in solitary
confinement on various occasions without any
justification whatsoever, has experienced recurrent
problems with his personal and legal correspondence,
his wife Adriana has not been granted a visa to
visit him and neither have they been able to
conceive a child. During his long and unjust
incarceration on fabricated charges for crimes he
did not commit and which were never proven, his
rights have been repeatedly violated.
Cuba will continue denouncing these
outrages before the world and will not give up its
undertaking to achieve the return to the homeland of
Gerardo and his four brothers unjustly incarcerated
and held in the United States for close to 14 years.
Havana, July 12, 2012
MIAMI
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