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Cuba Wants Life in Prison for Dissidents
AP ^ | Thu, Apr 03, 2003 | By ANITA SNOW

Posted on 04/03/2003 4:32:43 PM PST by FreeManWhoCan

HAVANA - The first wave of dissidents rounded up in a nationwide crackdown went on trial Thursday as Fidel Castro (news - web sites)'s government moved to wipe out growing opposition. Prosecutors sought life sentences for 12 of the 80 defendants. International media and foreign diplomats were excluded from the trials, the final phase of Cuba's harshest campaign against internal dissent in years.

"This is a judicial Tiananmen," said opposition member Manuel Cuesta Morua, referring to the 1989 Chinese military assault on pro-democracy student protesters in Tiananmen Square.

The recommended sentences of 15 years to life were aimed at "putting the brakes on the opposition and warning the United States about Cuban sovereignty," Cuesta Morua said outside one hearing Thursday.

About a dozen trial began in Havana and an undisclosed number started elsewhere in Cuba, ranging from the westernmost province of Pinar del Rio to Santiago in the far east. The government refused to say how many cases were under way but indicated all 80 trials would to be concluded within days.

Sentences here usually are announced in writing within two weeks after the proceedings.

"This is not a trial," Maria de los Angeles Menendez, who also showed up to support the defendants. "They are going to put on a show. The sentences are already decided."

The dissidents, rounded up beginning March 18, are accused of working with U.S. diplomats on the Caribbean island to subvert Castro's government and of being mercenaries in the pay of Washington.

Although Cuban authorities publicly announced the arrests and labeled many of the defendants traitors, they have not commented on the trials or disclosed specific charges. But court documents provided by relatives showed that many dissidents are being tried for state security crimes under laws that prohibit Cubans from working with foreign powers to undermine the socialist system.

The crackdown ended several years of relative government tolerance for the opposition. It began when Cuban officials criticized the head of the American mission in Havana, James Cason, for his active support of the island's opposition.

Rising Cuba-U.S. tensions have coincided with a string of hijackings by Cubans trying to leave the communist-run island.

On Wednesday, gunmen forced a Cuban ferry to head toward Florida; the boat returned to Cuba Thursday morning and the hijackers continued to hold the ferry and its passengers hostages. Two airliners were recently hijacked to Key West, Fla.: one on March 19 and a second on Tuesday.

As the trials opened, nine U.S. senators favoring an end to U.S. travel and trade restrictions on Cuba released a letter calling the arrests "deplorable."

"We hope that your government will immediately release these dissidents," members of the Senate Cuba Working Group wrote in a letter to Dagoberto Rodriguez, chief of the Cuban Interests Section in Washington. "Unless corrected, the recent actions of the Cuban government will only undermine efforts to expand contacts between the two countries."

The State Department also condemned the proceedings, saying they amounted to a "kangaroo court."

"While the rest of the hemisphere has moved toward greater freedom, the anachronistic Cuban government appears to be retreating into Stalinism," department spokesman Philip Reeker said in Washington.

Jose Miguel Vivanco, executive director of the Americas Division of Human Rights Watch, said the crackdown appeared to be timed to coincide with the war in Iraq (news - web sites).

"It is truly shameful that the Cuban government is opportunistically exploiting the world's inattention to try to crush domestic dissent," Vivanco said in a statement from New York.

The wives of several dissidents, meanwhile, complained Wednesday that their husbands had been unable to consult with attorneys and had not even seen the prosecution's written case against them.

"I feel so defenseless!" said Elsa Pollan, whose husband, Hector Fernando Maseda was going on trial Thursday. "Where can I find someone to defend my husband?"

Prosecutors are seeking life sentences for at least 12, including opposition political leaders Osvaldo Alfonso Valdes and Hector Palacios, who were being tried together with Maseda and three others, said activist Elizardo Sanchez.

An updated three-page list compiled by Sanchez's Cuban Commission on Human Rights and National Reconciliation released early Thursday showed life sentence recommendations for 12 of 80 defendants. One of them is economist Marta Beatriz Roque, who was among the dozen being tried Thursday at Havana's courthouse.

On Friday, independent journalists Ricardo Gonzalez and Raul Rivero were scheduled to go on trial in Havana. Prosecutors reportedly are seeking a life sentence for Gonzalez and 20 years for Rivero.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: castrowatch; cubafidelcastro
God help the people of Cuba.
1 posted on 04/03/2003 4:32:43 PM PST by FreeManWhoCan
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To: FreeManWhoCan
Calling Martin Sheen, Oliver Stone and Dan Rather. Calling all Castro kneepadder-hypocrites.
2 posted on 04/03/2003 4:37:41 PM PST by JeeperFreeper
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To: FreeManWhoCan
George W. Bush will be the first sitting president to set foot in a free Cuba........2006
3 posted on 04/03/2003 4:49:06 PM PST by CROSSHIGHWAYMAN
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To: FreeManWhoCan; ambrose
I defied the embargo and visited Cuba last year, figuring it was my best chance to see what Communism was really like, without supporting someone as odious as, say, Saddam or Kim Jong Il.

I had a fantastic time on my trip - the Cuban climate is wonderful, the people friendly, the women stunning. And Cuban Communism, well, it certainly made me feel the Cuban people were tragically shortchanged - but it was interesting to see.

Castro isn't as bad as Kim Jong Il, but that's mostly because in Cuba's tropical climate, things grow if you stick them in the ground. For that reason, his system works badly, but just well enough that people don't starve like they do in North Korea.

But this sort of thing sickens me.

I doubt that I'll return to Cuba until Castro's gone. In the end, I have this nasty feeling the pro-embargo types were right. The more tourism, the more repression.

Besides, would I really like to fly in a Yakolev Yak-42D again? Soviet jets are best left for those with true courage. Built in the 80s, feels like it was made in the 50s.

D
4 posted on 04/03/2003 5:01:05 PM PST by daviddennis (Visit amazing.com for protest accounts, video & more!)
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To: *Castro Watch
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
5 posted on 04/03/2003 5:17:10 PM PST by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: daviddennis
I got to know some Cubans when I lived in Key West in the late '60's. Great people. Some didn't understand why we were involved in Viet Nam on the other side of the globe while leaving Castro fat and happy in Havana. I told them the bum Kennedy failed to support the Bay of Pigs invasion which would have safe bet, because the Soviets hadn't even bonded up Castro at that time. Then JFK closed the case after the Cuban Crises by agreeing not to invade.
6 posted on 04/03/2003 5:38:29 PM PST by oyez (I don't know but I been told.)
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To: FreeManWhoCan
Pinging Jimmy Carter ... Jimmah? Jimmah? What say you, Jimmah?
7 posted on 04/03/2003 6:32:42 PM PST by NonValueAdded ("Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." GWB 9/20/01)
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To: JeeperFreeper
Calling all Castro kneepadder-hypocrites.

Ted Turner and Medea Benjamin (leader of the Code Pink commie front group agitating against the Iraq war) belong on the list.

Benjamin lived in Cuba for a time. She said "it was like I died and went to heaven" when describing her time in Castro's tropical gulag.

8 posted on 04/03/2003 8:08:34 PM PST by BillF (Sorry anti-American leftists, Saddam has left the planet!)
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To: daviddennis
I hope you realize the tragic mistake that you made. By going to Cuba, you gave money to an evil tyrant who has killed thousands of his own people, not to mention several Americans.

You say you want to see what Communism is "really like." Try reading Against All Hope by Armando Valladares, a prison memoir from Castro's gulags. Maybe then you will see what Cuban communism is "really like"

Andrew
9 posted on 04/05/2003 11:37:45 AM PST by walrus954
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