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Freedom for the
Cuban Five demanded in Washington and around the
world
Nuria
Barbosa León
Photos: Bill Hackwell
Friends of Cuba and people of good
will around the world are raising their voices and
carrying banners on the sidewalk in front of the
White House to once again demand an end to the
imprisonment of Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino
and Antonio Guerrero.

Protesters in front of the White
House call for the release of Gerardo Hernández,
Ramón Labañino and Antonio Guerrero.
These Cuban anti-terrorists were
arrested September 12, 1998, along with René
González and Fernando González (now free after
serving their sentences in full.) The Five were in
Miami to monitor terrorist anti-Cuban groups in that
city, but were arrested and convicted of conspiracy
in a rigged trial in 2001.
Activities marking the anniversary
of their jailing 16 years ago took place in
Washington, D.C. and included an event at Impact Hub
headquarters and a cultural evening at Casa Rutilio
Grande, in the Washington suburb of Takoma Park.
Among the distinguished participants were Attorney
José Pertierra, Canadian writer Stephen Kimber, and
former president of Mexico’s Senate Yeidckol
Polevnsky.
The Service Employees International
Union hosted an exhibit of Antonio Guerrero
paintings entitled "Absolved by Solidarity",
composed of 16 images portraying the Five’s seven-month
trial, during which journalists - paid by the U.S.
government - mounted a rabid media campaign to
create a hostile environment and deny the Five
justice.
The
Service Employees International Union hosted an
event in solidarity with the imprisoned Cubans.
Supporters of the Five held a vigil
outside the White House, carrying signs saying, "16
years is too long, Freedom for the Five now," and
the offices of legislators were visited. Several new
agencies including Telesur, Russia Today,
Agence France-Presse and Hispantv,
covered the activities.
The international solidarity
movement reported multiple actions around the world,
including mass mailing of letters to President Obama,
and protests outside U.S. embassies and consulates.
In La Courneuve, near Paris, the
French organization Cuba Sí participated in a
traditional event sponsored by the newspaper
L'Humanité, with René González in attendance; while
in Colombia Elizabeth Palmeiro, married to Ramón
Labañino, shared a message from her husband
expressing his gratitude for all the efforts
undertaken in that country on behalf of the Five.
On the Russian Foreign Ministry’s
website, Alexandr Lushévich described U.S. human
rights policies as hypocritical, citing the case of
the Five, who were attempting to stop terrorist
attacks on Cuba, and in no way constituted a threat
to U.S. national security.
The
Service Employees International Union hosted an
exhibit of Antonio Guerrero paintings entitled
“Absolved by Solidarity”, composed of 16 images
portraying the Five’s seven-month trial.
Friends in Kazakhstan presented
Cuban diplomats in Astana with a call for the
release of the remaining three prisoners, during an
event held in the headquarters of the organization
Zhuldyz (Star). The academic Vajit Rustemov
reiterated his support, as well.
Participants in a cultural event,
held in Teheran’s Latin American House, sent a
letter of solidarity to Havana, recalling that 16
years, 5,840 days - the time three of the Five have
been imprisoned - is a long time, and an unjust
punishment for trying to save human lives.
The Argentine Committee to Free the
Five visited the U.S. embassy in Buenos Aires, and
delivered a message, in English and Spanish, to
Business Attaché Kevin Sullivan, requesting that
their demands for the immediate release of Gerardo,
Ramón and Antonio be transmitted to President Obama.
Salvadoran
President Sánchez Cerén received Mirta Rodríguez,
Antonio Guerrero’s mother, in San Salvador.
In Chile, 11 deputies who are
members of a Parliamentary friendship with Cuba
commission, also sent a message to Washington,
calling for the normalization of relations between
Cuba and the United States, and demanding freedom
for the unjustly imprisoned anti-terrorists.
Salvadoran President Sánchez Cerén
conversed with Mirta Rodríguez, Antonio Guerrero’s
mother, who attended a mass in the Divina
Providencia Hospital Chapel where Monsignor Romero
was assassinated, in addition to other activities
organized in San Salvador as part of the
international campaign to free the Five.
Nicaragua’s solidarity with Cuba
coordinating committee met at the National
Engineering University in Managua and described the
five Cuban anti-terrorists as true heroes of world
peace, and in Lima, Peru, supporters marched along
the city’s central avenues carrying photos of the
imprisoned Cubans, and posters calling for their
immediate release.
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