Justice for the
Cuban Five
demanded at UN
Nuria Barbosa León
Testifying before the United Nations
Human Rights Council, Adriana Pérez once again
demanded a definitive resolution to the case of her
husband, Gerardo Hernández Nordelo, who is serving
an unjust prison sentence in the United States, as a
result of his efforts to prevent terrorism attacks
on Cuba.

Adriana
Pérez addressed the United Nations Human
Rights Council emphasizing the inhumane
and degrading treatment to which the
Cuban Five have been subjected. |
She explained that Antonio Guerrero
and Ramón Labañino remain imprisoned for the same
reason, while the other members of the Cuban Five,
René González and Fernando González have returned to
Cuba after completing their prison sentences in
full.
"Throughout this time, these men
have suffered torture, cruel, inhumane and degrading
treatment. Their trial was affected by corruption
and political motivations, a clear example of which
is the suppression and manipulation of evidence,"
she said.
Adriana affirmed that despite
repeated condemnations of this injustice in the
Human Rights Council, the U.S. government has
refused to free the Five and the corporate media
remains silent on the issue, although many important
individuals and organizations, including
parliamentarians, intellectuals. Nobel Prize winners
and heads of state have called for an end to the
injustice.
"This is the Human Rights Council;
it is the responsibility of this body to find an
immediate, definitive, humanitarian solution, to end
this suffering," she said.
Prior to the hearing held at UN
headquarters in Geneva, Adriana explained the major
violations of civil and human rights to which the
Five were subjected, over more than 15 years of
arbitrary incarceration, saying, "My husband is
condemned to die in prison, if Obama does not
intervene."

Elizabeth Palmeiro met Portuguese
legislator Sergio Sousa Pinto and other
political leaders in Lisbon. |
Representatives of 15 countries also
took the floor to express solidarity with the Five
and insisted on the need to intensify efforts
internationally to win the release of the three
remaining prisoners.
Adriana recalled that in May of
2005, the United Nations commission on arbitrary
detentions, found the arrest of the Five to be
arbitrary, given the lack of objectivity and
impartiality demonstrated during the trial, and
called upon the U.S. to respect international law.
Gerardo was arrested September 12,
1998, along with Ramón, Antonio, Fernando and René.
In 2001, the South Florida District Federal Court
found them guilty of charges which were never
substantiated during the trail, since the work of
the Cuban patriots was directed solely toward
preventing terrorist acts against Cuba, organized by
groups based in the Miami area.
Adriana additionally held a meeting
with UN ambassadors from the Latin American-Caribbean
group; conversed with Vatican representative Nuncio
Silvano Tomasi; Olav Fikse Tveit, secretary general
of the World Council of Churches; as well as UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights Flavia Pansieri.
In all of the conversations, Adriana
emphasized the fact that the there has still been no
response to the habeas corpus petition filed by
Gerardo more than two years ago, and outlined the
damage done to the mental and physical health of her
husband, and his co-defendants, as a result of the
many years of incarceration, calling on the U.S.
government to take an ethical, humanitarian position
and release the remaining three prisoners.
Also early in the month of March, in
Lisbon, Elizabeth Palmeiro, married to Ramón
Labañino, spoke to legislators, describing the case,
the violations of human rights it entails and the
need for an immediate resolution.
Antonio Filipe, vice president of
the nation’s Parliament, reiterated his solidarity
with the Cuban Five and praised efforts to
disseminate information about the case
internationally.
Elizabeth also attended a
parliamentary Portugual-Cuba friendship group and
spoke with Deputy Sergio Sousa Pinto, President of
the legislature’s Foreign Relations Commission. She
was awarded a special medal by the city of Almada’s
Council President Joaquim Judas.
She additionally met with Ilda
Figueredo, president of the Portuguese Peace and
Cooperation Council, and leaders a number of
political parties.