Journalists paid
to defame
the Cuban Five
• WASHINGTON, June 2.—U.S. groups
working for the release of the five Cuban anti-terrorists
incarcerated in that country today exposed details
of covert payments made to journalists covering the
case in Miami from December 1999 to December 2001,
Notimex reports.
Heidi Boghosian, executive director
of the National Lawyers Guild, informed a press
conference of a concerted campaign to smear court
procedures and influence the verdicts in the case of
the Five. In that way "the accused were deprived of
their right" to the Sixth Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution which guarantees the right to a fair
trial and to an impartial jury, she pointed out.
There is no doubt that misleading
articles and unfavorable accounts by reporters paid
by the government had a direct impact on public
opinion, the court and the Appeals Court in the case
of the Cubans, she noted.
Gloria La Riva, coordinator of the
National Committee to Free the Five pointed out that
payments to journalists by the government
constitutes a "violation of the federal law that
prohibits improper domestic propaganda." She stated
that the payments to journalists in Miami were made
by two U.S. agencies, the Cuba Broadcasting Board
and the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) for
Radio and TV Martí.
What makes the secret payments most
flagrant is that they were made by the very
government (United States) which tried the Cuban
five," she stated.
La Riva added that the largest TV
and Radio Martí audience is inside the United States,
in Miami, Florida" from where the jury was selected
to hear the case of the Cubans, who were
subsequently sentenced to prison terms ranging from
15 years to two life sentences.
"Although we have asked for
information dating back to 1996, BBG only gave us
information from November 1999" under the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA), the activist noted.
She mentioned that Wilfredo Cancio,
a reporter from the El Nuevo Herald daily,
received $4,725 between September 30, 2000 and
December 3, 2001.
La Riva also cited payments between
1999 and 2001 of $11,700 to Ariel Remos, from
Diario de las Americas; $58,600 to journalist
Pablo Alfonso; $5,200 to Enrique Encinosa, director
of Radio Mambi; and $1,125 to Helen Ferré, editor of
the opinion page at Diario de las Americas.
Gerardo, Ramón, Antonio, Fernando
and René were "irreparably harmed by the sea of
prejudice generated in the Miami press," she said.
The press conference convenors
announced that a coalition of organizations is to
launch a campaign calling on U.S. Attorney General
Eric Holder to take "immediate action" to free the
Cuban Five.