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The case of the Cuban Five
July 3, 2007
Reprinted from
BBC World Service
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Gerardo Hernández in Victorville prison
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In 1998, Cuban citizens Ruben Campa, Rene Gonzalez, Gerardo
Hernandez, Luis Medina and Antonio Guerrero were
arrested in Florida.
They were tried and convicted of using false identification,
espionage and conspiracy to commit murder.
All five were convicted in December 2001 and awarded
sentences ranging from 15 years to a double life
sentence.
The five have always claimed they were protecting the people
of Cuba from assasination attempts and terrorist
plots by anti-Castro exiles living in Miami.
However, the U.S prosecution claimed their
actions were unlawful and the men subsequently
made a series of appeals to try and overturn the
decision.
A new hearing is scheduled for August in Atlanta, Georgia
where three appeal judges will decide whether to
overturn their conviction and grant a re-trial.
In the first ever media interview given by any of the
prisoners Newshour's Claire Bolderson spoke to
Gerardo Hernandez from his maximum security
prison in Victorville, California.
First broadcast 2nd July
Listen to the 10-minute edited version of the
interview here
(includes several minutes with spokesperson from
CANF)
(mp3)
Listen to the 16-minute raw audio
(the complete interview with Gerardo)
here (mp3)
Transcript of the interview
Special to freethefive.org
July 2, 2007
Transcription by Steve Patt and Gloria La Riva,
National Committee to Free the Cuban Five
Portions of this transcript in
[bracketed italics] are part of the
16-minute raw audio and were not part of the
10-minute edited broadcast. The more limited
transcript of the 10-minute portion only is
online
here.
Claire Bolderson: Well next month, a court in Florida
is going to hear an appeal in a case that sums
up much about the relationship between the
United States and Cuba. Gerardo Hernández and
four other Cubans were convicted in Florida in
December, 2001 [sic: June, 2001] on a range of
charges including trying to obtain U.S. military
secrets, spying on Cuban exile groups, and, in
Mr. Hernández' case, conspiracy in the deaths of
four Cuban-Americans whose planes were shot down
by the Cuban government in 1996.
Gerardo Hernández is serving a double life sentence,
but he argues that all he was trying to do was
protect Cuba from what he calls "terrorist
groups," anti-Castro organizations based in the
U.S. He and his fellow defendants also argue
that their trial was unfair because of the
anti-Castro mood in Florida where it was held.
In the first-ever media interview given by any of the
five prisoners, I spoke to Mr. Hernández on the
telephone from his maximum security prison in
Victorville, California, and asked him to
explain his story from the beginning.
[Claire Bolderson: Mr Hernandez, I know there has been
a lot of concern about your treatment in prison
and the time you spent a while ago in solitary
confinement. Can you describe for me how you are
being treated now, what the conditions are for
you in prison?]
[Gerardo Hernández: Well, I'm a regular inmate in a US
penitentiary and I would say that the worst part
of my treatment has not to do with the prison
but with the government of the US. I would say
that the worst part of my imprisonment is that I
haven't been able to see my wife for the last
ten years, because the US government doesn't
grant a visa to her to come to visit me. That's
one of the things, and I would say that for the
rest of the things, you know, it's a prison and
I am an inmate like every other and it's not
easy to be an inmate, but I'm doing alright.]
[Claire Bolderson: Are you saying then that you have
had no family visits at all?]
[Gerardo Hernández: Well, I have received some family visits
- my mother and sister have been able to come,
but in the case of my wife, my wife of nineteen
years, she hasn't been able to come to visit me
because she has been constantly denied a visa to
come. So I haven't been able to see her for the
last ten years.]
CB:
[You were convicted on a number of counts, including
one of them was trying to obtain US military
secrets, by trying to infiltrate a base, and for
acting as an unregistered agent for a foreign
government.]
Can you explain to us what you were doing in
Florida in the first place?
Gerardo Hernández: Well in the first place, I was gathering
information on terrorist groups that used to
operate in Florida with total impunity.
[They are people
that have got training camps there and
paramilitary organisations and they go to Cuba
and commit sabotage, bombs and all kinds of
aggressions. And as I told you, they have had
impunity.] So at a certain point
Cuba decided to send some people to gather
information on those groups and send it back to
Cuba to prevent those actions. And in 1998, Cuba
passed to the FBI some information regarding
those groups, hoping that the FBI would do
something against them. And unfortunately, what
they did was arrest the people that had gathered
that information. [As for the military part, I was charged with conspiracy to commit
espionage, and that was because there wasn't
espionage at all. In our trial that lasted seven
months, there were three or four retired
generals from the US army who testified that
there was nothing related to espionage in this
case, but since the trial was in Miami and we
couldn't have a fair trial. We were found
guilty, but I reiterate that it was a conspiracy
because the government said, "Wait a minute -
they didn't commit espionage, but they would
have tried to commit it sometime," so that's the
conspiracy to commit espionage, but not a single
piece of secret information, nothing related to
the national security of the US was gathered or
transmitted.]
CB: But you do acknowledge that you were working as an
agent for a foreign government, and in one of
your defense statements you do say that you were
working with false documents, false identity
documents?
GH: Yes, I do acknowlege that.
[CB: But that's quite a serious thing to have been
doing then, isn't it?]
GH: [Yes, it is,]
but there is something called "necessity
defense," that says that if
[in order to
prevent a wrongdoing], in order to
prevent crime you have to violate a law, you can
understand that. In my case, yes I had fake
I.D., I was working for foreign government, but
not to affect the U.S. interests, but to defend
Cuban interests, to defend the Cuban people from
terrorism.
CB: And the crimes you were trying to stop, what
exactly were they, the crimes?
GH: Well, for example, in 1997, a bomb exploded in a Cuban
hotel and killed
[Fabio Di Celmo], an Italian
tourist. And in 1976, as you know, a bomb
exploded in a Cuban airplane and killed 73
people. And that's only two examples of
terrorist acts committed against Cuba. Anybody
who lives in Miami, [who
see the TV, the local TV station or radio
station] they know what Comandos F-4
is, and they know what Alpha 66 is
[and they know
what Brothers to the Rescue is.]
[CB: And what are those, can you explain to me, what
are those names?]
[Yes, they used to be called paramilitary groups. I call them
terrorist groups.] They have got training camps in the Everglades, they dress in
camouflage, and have weapons, and they train for
the day they're going to "liberate Cuba." They
used to go to Cuba in boats and fire at Cuban
buildings and they tried to organize an internal
sabotage and all kind of actions.
[That is public
record - you check the Miami newspapers, you can
see that. You can see that they get involved and
go to Cuba and do some shootings and they go
back and are received like heroes and, for
example, in our trial, we presented some
witnesses, we subpoenaed the Coast Guard and we
subpoenaed the FBI and we presented the evidence
of the impunity that these people have. We
asked, for example, to a Coast Guard official,
"Is it true that this day you intercepted a
group that was heading to Cuba with some weapons
and explosives?" "Yes, it is true." "Is it true
that you just took the weapons and freed the
guys?" "Yes." "Why?" "Well, because they said
that they were fishing for lobsters." Something
like that happened in our trial and it's not a
single case - there's a long record of terrorist
aggressions against my country. So the Cuban
people have the right to defend themselves
against terrorist actions.]
Hopefully the U.S. government and the U.S.
authorities will do something, because they say
they have a war against terrorists, but why are
you going to allow those terrorists to operate
freely in Miami?
[Recently, just
a month ago, the guy who masterminded the bomb
on the Cuban airplane that killed 73 people, he
was set free and he's free now in Miami.]
CB: There is one very contentious charge on which you
were convicted and the reason why you are
serving such a long sentence – the shooting down
by Cuba of two civilian planes from the United
States in 1996. Did you have any role connected
to that?
GH: No, absolutely not. [But you have to understand what really
happened. The person leading those planes is
called José Basulto, he was a CIA operative in
the '60s, he was infiltrated into Cuba to do
sabotage. After that, in 1962, he went back to
Cuba from Florida in a boat and he fired a
cannon against a Cuban hotel, went back to Miami
and was received like a hero. And he has a long
history of terrorism against Cuba, and at some
point in his life he said "Alright, I'm going to
be a humanitarian now, I want to get this small
plane and fly inside Cuba with no permission at
all and drop leaflets and propaganda," and he
did it, like, sixteen times. And Cuba sent to
the US sixteen diplomatic notes, which were
presented in our trial, complaining to the U.S.
and saying, "Hey, these people are violating
international laws, U.S. laws, Cuban laws." The
Cuban MIGs used to take off and escort those
people out and Cuba used to say "Hey, don't do
it anymore, you are putting in danger our own
aviation, our population, everything."]
[CB: That may have been wrong, and I'm sure there have
been many diplomatic arguments about it, but
what I'm interested in is what you did about
it?]
GH: [Nothing!]
I was in Miami and the plane was shot down in
Cuban waters, a long way away
[from me].
CB: So you didn't pass any information that would have
helped the Cuban government to shoot down the
planes?
GH: No, of course not. If you go to the records of those
times, you will see that José Basulto announced
way before the trip, he said "we are going there
on February 24." Everybody knew that.
[We presented in
our trial a memorandum from the U.S. government,
one agency, the Federal Aviation Agency, telling
their people "Hey, he's going to do that on
February 24th, we are concerned that something
is going to happen, because Cuba already said if
they do it again, they're going to be shot down,
so we'd better have all the ducks in a row,"
that's actually what the memo said. So everybody
was expecting that something would happen, we
even in our trial, Richard Nuccio, the former
advisor to President Clinton, he was at the
trial and said, "Yeah, that organisation was out
of control." There is a long dispute over the
incident and Cuba says they shot the planes
inside Cuban waters according to Cuban radar,
the U.S. says that one plane was in Cuban waters
but the two that were shot down were heading
there but in international waters.]
And the government charged me for conspiracy,
and they said that is because I knew that the
plane would be shot down, and because I knew
that the plane would be shot down over
international waters, which has no sense at all.
It's something crazy, but they need to blame
somebody and they chose me.
CB: You have an appeal coming up. What will be the
grounds for your appeal?
GH: [Well, we have
different issues in our appeal. The main issue,
which we really wanted and unfortunately was
reversed, is a venue issue -] We
argued that the trial wasn't fair in Miami. Our
trial lasted over seven months and there were
over 100 witnesses. The jury deliberated a few
hours and they didn't ask a single question.
They just found us guilty on every single count,
and then the judge gave us the highest sentence
possible on every count.
CB: And you say that that is because of the influence
of the Cuban exile community in Florida?
GH: Yes, of course. During the trial there were all kind of
irregularities, to call it like that. People
were filming the jurors, and following the
jurors, the press was following the jurors to
their cars, and there were riots or some kind of
protest in front of the courts, all kind of
things. [Also the press was really rough with us.]
CB: So you think the jury was intimidated, or even
tampered with? Was it as serious as that?
GH: I believe the jury was intimidated. Anybody who lives in
Miami or who knows what is going on there would
understand that nothing related to Cuba is
normal in Miami.
[Right now, for example, a book has been taken
off the shelves in Miami, taken out of schools,
just because on the cover there are some Cuban
kids smiling and looking happy. It's a book for
kids named "Let's Go to Cuba" and they just
pulled it out because of that, because there is
a phrase in the book that says, "Cuban kids
study and live like you," something like that,
and just because of that - and everybody that
knows the history of Miami knows that people
have been killed just because they want a better
relation with Cuba. I mean, I can tell you about
the Replica magazine that was bombed like seven
times because they advocate for better relations
with Cuba. People in Miami - you have to live
there to understand. Most American people don't
even have an idea of what is going on in Miami,
it's like another country.]
CB: Cuban leader Fidel Castro in the past has taken
quite an interest in your case and he's spoken
on your behalf. Have you heard from him directly
at all?
GH: Well I had the opportunity to talk to him by phone on his
birthday two years ago.
[It was
something I didn't expect, I just called my wife
that day because it was also my friend René
González's birthday. And our families happened
to be with him. So when I found out I told my
wife, "Please, t ell him happy birthday from
me," and then he said, "Oh, hold on one second,
I want him to tell me," so I had the chance to
talk to him for a few minutes, which was a great
experience for me, of course.]
CB: And what did he say?
GH: Well he said that he's confident that justice will
prevail because he has always been confident
that when the American people find out about
what has been done in our case, when the
American people find out the truth about our
case, justice will prevail. Everybody is
confident on that.
CB: Gerardo Hernández of the so-called Cuban Five, on
the phone from prison in California
(http://www.freethefive.org/) 03-07-2007
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