Declaration of the U.S. Movement in
Solidarity with the Cuban Five to the rest of the
International Movement for the Freedom of the Cuban
Five

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THE following organizations have issued this
declaration: The National Committee to Free the
Cuban Five; the International Committee for the
Freedom of the Cuban Five; and the organizations of
the Cuban Immigration in Miami that together
comprise the Alianza Martiana (Marti Alliance): the
Antonio Maceo Brigade, the Alianza Martiana as an
individual organization, the Alliance of Workers of
the Cuban Community (ATC), the José Martí
Association, and political parties of the United
States who are part of the Cuban Five solidarity
movement.
With our declaration we reaffirm our unwavering
commitment to maintain and strengthen our efforts to
demand the immediate freedom of our five brothers:
Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino, Antonio Guerrero,
Fernando González and René González, as they are
innocent of the charges that the U.S. government has
convicted them of.
Today, Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2009, in Miami’s United
States Federal District Court for the Southern
District of Florida, a hearing was held to reduce
the sentence of one of our five brothers, Antonio
Guerrero. It is one of three re-sentencing hearings
ordered by the full panel of the 11th Circuit Court
of Appeals in September 2008. The U.S. Federal
District Court has not yet set the date or dates of
the other two re-sentencing hearings of our brothers
Ramón Labañino and Fernando González.
In September 2008 the 11th Circuit Court of
Appeals vacated the trial court's previous life
sentence imposed on Antonio Guerrero and Ramon
Labañino, and the 19-year sentence imposed on
Fernando González in December 2001. The Five were
convicted in June 2001.
Today the Court imposed a prison sentence of 21
years and 10 months on Antonio Guerrero for his
unjust conviction of conspiracy to commit espionage.
Independently of the court process and the
decisions that are issued by the court, we maintain
our steadfast demand for the immediate freedom of
the Cuban Five.
The judicial case prosecuted against our five
brothers has nothing to do with justice. This is,
and always has been, a political case.
Since the triumph of the Cuban Revolution in
1959, every administration of the U.S. government
has maintained a policy of permanent aggression
against the Cuban people. A fundamental part of this
policy of aggression has been the use of violence
against the Cuban people. For decades the U.S.
administrations have been directly or indirectly
involved -- through terrorist organizations of the
Cuban-American extreme right wing in the United
States -- in countless terrorist attacks against the
Cuban people, causing the deaths of 3,478 Cuban men,
women and children, and injuring 2,099 Cubans. The
peace, security and well-being of the Cuban people
have been tragically affected.
In the interest of defending its people -- as any
other responsible government would do -- the
government of Cuba assigned to the Five the task of
infiltrating the terrorist organizations of the
Cuban-American extreme right wing. Everyone in this
city knows full well that the terrorist
organizations have carried out campaigns of death
and terror against the Cuban people for decades.
Stopping terrorism was the mission of the Cuban Five.
Instead of arresting the terrorists and
prosecuting them for their crimes, the U.S.
government, a participant in these nefarious
campaigns of death and terror, arrested the Five 11
years ago this past September. Since then it has
kept them arbitrarily imprisoned.
It is for these reasons that today in Miami we
reaffirm and make known to our Five brothers, to
their families and all our sisters and brothers in
the U.S. and the international movement to Free the
Five, as well as the Cuban people, our unalterable
decision to continue and strengthen our struggle for
their immediate freedom.
Miami, October 13, 2009