Alarcón
denounces cloak of silence around support for the
Cuban Five
Juan
Diego Nusa Peñalver
RICARDO
Alarcón, president of Cuba’s Parliament, speaking in
Havana, denounced the U.S. and international
corporate media for their silence regarding the
massive international support for the petition to
the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case of the Cuban
Five.
During a tribute by Cuba’s National Assembly
members on National Press Day, Alarcón spoke about
anti-terrorist fighters Gerardo Hernández, Ramón
Labañino, Fernando González, Antonio Guerrero and
René González, who have been serving unjust,
disproportionate sentences in U.S. prisons for the
last 10 years.
On March 6, the defense team for the Five
submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court a total of 12
amicus curiae briefs backing the petition
submitted January 30 asking the court to hear their
case, Alarcón noted.
The submission of so many "friends of the court"
briefs is unprecedented in U.S. legal history, being
the largest number ever submitted to the Supreme
Court, Alarcón affirmed.
He emphasized that the 12 briefs included 10
signed by Nobel laureates José Ramos Horta,
president of Timor Leste; Adolfo Pérez Esquivel;
Rigoberta Menchú; José Saramago; Wole Soyinka;
Zhores Alferov; Nadine Gordimer; Günter Grass; Darío
Fo and Mairead Maguire.
Similar documents were signed by a plenum of the
Mexican Senate; the Panamanian National Assembly;
Mary Robinson, former Irish president (1992-97) and
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (1997-2002),
among others.
Alarcón accused the corporate media of trying to
silence and sweep under the rug this international
support, which in this case, also means that each
signatory to an amicus curiae brief must pay the
Supreme Court $2,000 for it to be accepted.
Such documents have to be presented by a U.S.
lawyer, and in this case, all of the lawyers waived
their fees (an average of $30,000), also an
unprecedented event, the parliamentary president
added.
Alarcón also noted that one of the Five, Gerardo
Hernández Nordelo, is a member of the Union of Cuban
Journalists (UPEC), a Cuban press colleague,
arbitrarily sentenced to two life sentences plus 15
years in prison.
Gerardo merited special recognition on Cuban
Press Day, he commented. (AIN)
Translated by Granma International
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