3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE FOR
WORLD EQUILIBRIUM
U.S. court to review decision
allowing government to conceal evidence proving
Five’s innocence
•
States Alarcón at
launch of The Last Soldiers of the Cold War
• Lula
attends launch of Cuban edition of Brazilian
Fernando Morais' book
Pedro de la Hoz
•
IF the evidence relating to the
five Cuban anti-terrorist fighters concealed by the
U.S. government were to be released, it would
provide irrefutable and convincing arguments to
prove their innocence, free them immediately and
allow them to return to their homeland.
|

Lula reads the book,
flanked by
Fernando Morais and Alarcón
(Photo: Juvenal Balán) |
Cuban
National Assembly President Ricardo Alarcón de
Quesada gave this information to delegates at the
3rd International Conference for World Equilibrium
during the launch of the Cuban edition of the Los
últimos soldados de la Guerra fría, (The Last
Soldiers of the Cold War), by the Brazilian writer
Fernando Morais, an event also attended by his
compatriot, former President Luiz Inácio Lula da
Silva, a special guest at the conference
commemorating the 160th anniversary of the birth of
José Martí.
Alarcón also
noted that a panel of a U.S. Court of Appeals in
California recently ordered the review of a previous
decision allowing the U.S. government to withhold
satellite images taken over the Strait of Florida on
February 24, 1996.
Federal
authorities have previously refused this petition
from the Five’s defense team because, according to
Alarcón, the material proves beyond doubt that the
light aircraft brought down that day by Cuban
security forces were in Cuban airspace, thus
refuting the unfounded charge against Gerardo
Hernández for conspiracy to commit murder.
Washington
has also refused to release receipts for payments
made to journalists who contributed to what the
Atlanta Appeal Court judges described as “a perfect
storm of prejudice and hostility.”
Alarcón
highlighted the paradox that while the media had
mostly silenced the injustice committed against the
Five, in southern Florida, both before and during
the trial, federal employees pretending to be
journalists – many of them linked to Cuban terrorist
groups – were manipulating public opinion and
pressuring the jury.
Alarcón
described Morais' book as an enormous contribution
to the cause of freedom for the Five, and commented
that it is a work that Martí would have read with
loving interest, having encountered in its pages
five young men who lived, like himself, in the
“belly of the beast” and yet have retained intact
their dignity and love for the distant homeland.
Morais
expressed his conviction that, sooner rather than
later, he will meet with Gerardo, Ramón, Antonio,
Fernando and René, in Havana to celebrate the
triumph of truth and justice.
During the
event, Frei Betto and the U.S.-based Cuban
journalist, Max Lesnick, expressed their admiration
for the courage and honesty of the Five and Morais’
literary contribution. •