Justice For The Cuban Five - Picket The US Embassy
Demand Justice For The Cuban Five
Picket The US Embassy
Wednesday 17 June 12-2pm
Fitzherbert Terrace, Thorndon
US Supreme Court adds justice to Cuban Blockade
In Washington on Monday the United States Supreme Court refused the application for a review of the case of the ‘Cuban Five,’[i] thumbing their nose at the United Nations Committee on Arbitrary Detention, and throwing the issue straight into the lap of President Barack Obama in yet another test of his claimed commitment to human rights and international law.
The Cuban Five trial is the only judicial proceeding in U.S. history to have been condemned by the U.N. Human Rights Commission. On 27 May 2005 the United Nations Committee on Arbitrary Detention declared that “The deprivation of liberty of Mr. Antonio GuerreroRodríguez, Mr. Fernando González Llort, Mr. Gerardo Hernández Nordelo, Mr. Ramón Labaniño Salazar and Mr. René González Schweret is arbitrary, being in contravention of article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights...” and requested the United States Government to adopt the necessary steps to remedy the situation, in conformity with the principles stated in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights [ii].
In the intervening years the
case has been tied up in the US justice system, going to
appeal three times. In August 2005 a three-judge panel ruled
on one issue, that of venue [iii], and agreed with the UN
committee, overturning the convictions and ordering a
retrial in a place other than Miami [iv]. Bush’s administration was quick
to appeal, and a full bench of the same appeal court saw the
convictions re-instated in August 2006 [v]. The remaining nine issues of
appeal were decided in June 2008
As Bruce Nestor, a past president
of the National Lawyers Guild said following the 2006
decision, “The decision really gives tremendous power to
the government to bring politically motivated prosecutions
and to then select a favorable location where community
prejudice will favor the government and allow the government
to obtain a conviction where the evidence did not support a
conviction.” He went on to say that the decision of the en
banc panel, which essentially deferred to the judgment of
the trial court, basically eliminated the potential for
effective independent review.
The extent of international concern about the legal issues raised by the case of the Cuban Five was reflected in the record number of Amicus Briefs filed in support of a review, the petitioners including ten Nobel laureates, a former U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, numerous U.S. and foreign bar associations and human rights organizations, hundreds of parliamentarians, and several ex-Presidents, including two former Presidents and three current Vice-Presidents of the European Parliament.
In March 2009, Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann, President of the U.N. General Assembly, made a strong plea before the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva, "We are very hopeful about meaningful and credible change being brought by the new U.S. Administration. The immediate ex-incarceration of the five Cubans would help strengthen our confidence that the promised change is for real," he said.
A Supreme Court review was widely seen not only as the last chance for the Cuban Five to receive justice at the hands of the US system, but also as the last chance for the US justice system to redeem itself in the eyes of the world.
Now that the Court has declined its opportunity to work towards that goal, a Presidential decree is one of the few remaining options, to ensure US observance of article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and justice for the Cuban Five.
Can Barack Obama match his rhetoric with action, and demonstrate the kind of commitment to human rights and international law that this case epitomises? Only the immediate release of Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino, Antonio Guerrero, Fernando González and René González will suffice to show that the US did not yesterday add ‘justice’ to the list of blockaded ítems.
Demand Justice For The Cuban Five
Picket The Us Embassy Wednesday 17 June 12-2pm
Fitzherbert Terrace, Thorndon
Notes
[i]In the 90’s Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino, Antonio Guerrero, Fernando González and René González infiltrated Miami-based terrorist organisations responsible for numerous deadly attacks against Cuban tourist and other installations, preventing at least 170 further strikes. They were arrested in September 1998, held in solitary confinement for 17 months, and in 2001 were tried, convicted, and sentenced in Miami, hotbed of rabid anti-Castro hysteria. For more info see http://wwwscoop.co.nz/stories/HL0610/S00136.htm
[ii]http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/G05/164/78/PDF/G0516478.pdf?OpenElement Pg 65 Para 32
[iii] The issue of venue was central to the ability of the Five to receive a fair trial, and the first judgement by the three-judge panel in 2005 subjected this aspect to close scrutiny, with wide-reaching implications not only for the Cuban Five, but for defendants everywhere. Leonard Weinglass, Defence Attorney said after the 2005 decision “...the Court analyzed in great detail virtually every facet of the case of the community, of the publicity, the attitude of the jurors, the actions of the prosecutor, and the motions that were made during trial and after trial. It is as extensive and factual in detailed an analysis on the issue of venue that I have ever seen in a written opinion by any court anywhere.”[iv]
[v]http://www.ca11.uscourts.gov/opinions/ops/200117176op2.pdf
[vi]http://www.ca11.uscourts.gov/opinions/ops/200117176.opn3.pdf
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