[NYTr] Alarcon Says US People Could Help Free the Cuban 5 Date: Wed, 5 Sep 2007 17:22:18 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit [In addition to their truly dreadful CBS Evening News coverage of the Appeals hearing and the Cuban 5 case, CBS has published an article by Portia Siegelbaum on an interview with Alarcon about the Cuban 5, which follows the ACN story below. -NY Transfer] Agencia Cubana de Noticias (ACN) http://ainch.ain.cu/mailman/listinfo/ingles Alarcon Says American People Could Help Release the Five Havana, Sept 5 (acn) The head of the Cuban Parliament, Ricardo Alarcon said the possibility of having the Five men imprisoned in the U.S released earlier depends very much on the support they receive from the American people. "The first step is to let that people know the truth. This is what we need to keep on demanding," said the Parliament president. In the daily TV Round Table show, Ricardo Alarcon, gave legal and ethical details of the Five's case, showing the double standards of the U.S' policy and its hostility towards Cuba. The statements were the continuity of an interview he gave last August 27 also broadcasted on Cuban TV. The President of the Cuban parliament said the American government is aware of the effect that the support of the American people could have on international opinion. For that reason the media has been instructed to refer to the Cuban men only as "spies." Alarcon said the American government has turned a blind eye on news releases that show Washington's political bias against the Five. He mentioned the articles posted by London's BBC and the New York Times, which were very objective, but they are not willing to follow the case. It will be nine years on the coming September 12, since Gerardo Hernandez, Fernando Gonzalez, Ramon LabaC1ino, Antonio Guerrero and Rene Gonzalez, were sent to American jails. That day in 1998, the Five Cuban men were arrested and later subjected to a politically biased trial in Miami. The judicial process ended in 2001 with the judge handing down harsh sentences on the men, whose only crime was to infiltrate Miami-based extreme right groups that operated with Washington's consent, organizing and conducted terrorist actions against the Cuban people. Alarcon pointed out that the U.S does not have evidence proving that the Five were conspiring to commit espionage or murder. However, they are serving outrageous terms in jail. All the evidence is available online to all news agencies willing to report on the issue, Alarcon said. He mentioned the internet portal of the U.S Justice Department, on the South Florida Court, "look up the U.S. case against Gerardo Hernandez," he pointed. Alarcon said on one occasion, the American government decided to remove the second charge -conspiracy to commit espionage- from the files of three of the defendants -Gerardo, Ramon and Antonio-, as long as they pleaded guilty to other crimes. However, the third charge would not be taken to the negotiating table. Instead, seeking to please the Miami-based Cuban-American community, a charge of quadruple fist degree murder was added to the case. The U.S government ended up recognizing in writing before the Court of Appeals of Atlanta, that the charges had been manipulated. Now we have to wait until the Court overrules such allegations, explained the Cuban official. The head of the Cuban parliament went on to say that the Cuban Five acted under the principle of "State of Necessity," comparing the case with that of former U.S president Jimmy Carter's daughter, who was arrested in the late 1980's for taking over a building to protest against the CIA. Eventually, she was released on the grounds that she and the other 14 people accompanying her had committed minor crimes to avoid a greater one. Likewise, Alarcon mentioned the case of Zacarias MusagC