Speaking to participants in
the International Conference of Studies on the Americas that
began yesterday in Havana, Alarcon referred to the importance of
intensifying efforts in the battle for the release of Gerardo
Hernandez, Fernando Gonzalez, Antonio Guerrero, Rene Gonzalez
and Ramon Labañino – internationally known as the Cuban Five –
who were arrested and given harsh sentences in Miami for
monitoring extreme right-wing anti-Cuba groups that were
planning and carrying out terrorist actions against the
Caribbean nation from South Florida.
The top legislator recalled that during Guerrero’s re-sentencing
hearing last October, the judge of the Southern District of
Florida recognized the importance of the international movement
of solidarity with the Five.
During the hearing, Guerrero was re-sentenced to 21 years plus
10 months – more than what the Defense and the Prosecution teams
had agreed to – and the Government’s only argument in favor of
the defendant was the pressure exerted by international
solidarity groups and personalities.
Other topics such as the injustices and violations in the legal
process against the Five as well as President Barack Obama’s
ability to order the release of the five Cuban antiterrorists
were also analyzed by Alarcon during his address at the Center
of Studies on the Americas in Havana.
He also recalled that the US Supreme Court received 12 Amicus
Curiae (Friends of the Court) reports in favor of the Five
signed by 10 Nobel Prize laureates, hundreds of legislators from
all over the world and many associations such as the
International Federation of Human Rights and the National
Lawyers Guild of the United States.
Alarcon recalled that the re-sentencing hearings of Fernando and
Ramon are scheduled for December 8 and he announced that, in the
case of Gerardo and Rene, the Defense team will file a petition
for a writ of habeas corpus – their last legal resource - before
June 2010.