Metro Times Article on Detroit Support for the Cuban Five
& Right-wing Columnist Frank Beckmann Condemns City Council
Resolution
For more information on the cases of the Cuban Five just log on to the
following URL sites:
http://www.freethefive.org
http://www.antiterroristas.cu
News Hits salutes our comrades in
Detroit City Council for their commitment to international civil rights
and upholding Detroit's title as America's most liberal city.
On April 1, Councilmember JoAnn Watson joined former Council President
Maryann Mahaffey in presenting a resolution calling for the release of
the Cuban Five, a group currently imprisoned by the U.S. government
after being charged with conspiracy to commit espionage. Passed
unanimously the previous week, the resolution was given to Leonard
Weinglass, an attorney for one of the five, at a forum sponsored by the
Michigan Emergency Committee Against War & Injustice.
The five are Cuban citizens sent to Florida by the Cuban government to
report on the activities of anti-Castro groups. They've sat in prison
since being arrested by the FBI in 1998. A three-judge appellate panel
overturned their 2001 convictions last summer, saying the group did not
receive a fair trial. But last year, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Atlanta threw out that decision. As a result, the men remain
locked up in various locations while the appeals process began all over
again.
The problem, according to council members, is that the U.S. government
is unfairly cracking down on a pro-Castro group while allowing violent,
anti-Castro organizations an easier time. Of the 26 charges leveled
against the five, none included the use of violence or weapons,
property damage or the leaking of classified documents. Council deemed
24 of these charges "relatively minor and technical offenses,"
consisting mainly of the use of false names and the failure to register
as foreign agents — nothing worthy of the multiple life terms some of
the men received.
It isn't just the Detroit City Council that's making noise. The United
Nations has also protested against the U.S. government's treatment of
the five, saying it "violates international norms of lawful detention."
Amnesty International has condemned the government's refusal to allow
visas to family members wishing to visit the imprisoned men.
The council sent copies of the document to President George Bush, the
U.S. attorney general, the secretary of state, several senators, public
officials and the mass media. So far as News Hits can make out, the
only local mention of it was in a Frank Beckmann column in the Detroit
News. "Council casts its lot with accused spies, murders." (Read that
headline again, careful, and you'll see a truly laughable mistake that
portrays the council as a collection of homicidal maniacs. At least we
assume it's a mistake.)
As for longtime radio guy Beckmann, we offer this advice: Settle down,
Frank. What's the point of being named "America's most liberal city" by
San Francisco's Bay Area Center for Voting Research if we can't support
the commies on occasion?
News Hits is edited by Curt Guyette. Contact the column at 313-202-8004
or NewsHits@metrotimes.com.
Right-wing Columnist Response to
Detroit Support for the Cuban Five
Detroit's Council casts its lot with
accused spies, murders
Frank Beckmann / April 7, 2006
Just when you thought Detroit's dysfunctional City Council couldn't
produce another "You've got to be kidding me" moment, it does.
The latest came March 29th when the council voted unanimously to urge
"Freedom for Ramon Labanino, Rene Gonzalez, Fernando Gonzalez, Antonio
Guerrero and Gerardo Hernandez -- the Cuban Five."
In 2001, a federal jury convicted the Cuban Five on charges of spying
in the United States for Cuba. Hernandez was convicted of conspiracy to
commit murder in the deaths of four fliers whose freedom flight from
Cuba was shot down by one of Fidel Castro's MiG fighters in 1996. He
was sentenced to two life prison terms, while his co-defendants
received terms ranging from 15 years to life.
The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta has ordered a new trial
and change of venue for the quintet -- not for a lack of evidence, but
because it felt the jury might have been tainted by publicity and
anti-Castro sentiment in Miami, the original trial city (none of the
jurors were of Cuban descent).
Communist and socialist organizations -- such as Workers World -- have
made the case a cause celebre against "U.S. imperialism," and Castro's
government has demanded the release of the "Cuban Five," even before a
new trial has been scheduled.
It's one thing for Detroit's council to have a social conscience, but
quite another to take the side of five people convicted of spying
against our own country and engaging in activity that led to the deaths
of four people.
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http://www.africadaily.com
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http://english.aljazeera.net/HomePage
http://www.freemumia.org
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http://www.caribbeannewspapers.com
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