Friday, March 11, 2011

Cuba 'to release' key dissident, 9 others

Cuba 'to release' key dissident, 9 others
(AFP)

HAVANA — The Cuban government has agreed to release a prominent
political dissident and free another nine prisoners jailed for violent
crimes, the Catholic Church said.

Oscar Elias Biscet was arrested during an internationally criticized
roundup of regime opponents in 2003.

He had refused Havana's offer to go into exile in Spain and has been
serving a 25-year sentence, but the church said Havana had agreed to let
him stay on the communist island after his release.

During his incarceration, Biscet was awarded the US Presidential Medal
of Freedom in 2007 by then-US president George W. Bush.

Cardinal Jaime Ortega told Biscet he would be released "soon," but
declined to provide an exact date, his wife Elsa Morejon said.

"I have been waiting for his freedom for years, I am very excited," she
told AFP.

Under a deal negotiated with the Catholic Church, President Raul Castro
has authorized the release of 52 political prisoners out of a group of
75 arrested during the police roundup of dissidents eight years ago.
After Biscet's release, only three of them will remain behind bars.

Castro's government considers dissidents as "mercenaries" on
Washington's payroll.

Another nine prisoners the Archdiocese of Havana said Castro's
government would free were initially convicted on weapons, terror,
hijacking and other state security crimes. They will go into exile in
Spain, joining other recently released Cuban prisoners.

Their names are Rene Amor, Jorge Adan, Fidel Rangel, Osvell Valle,
Randol Roca, Juan Rodriguez, Douglas Faxas, Carlos Diaz and Armando
Alcantara, the church said.

They are prisoners convicted of activities deemed a danger to the state,
but are not considered political prisoners by the government insofar as
they were not activists with a political group opposing the only
one-party communist regime in the Americas.

According to the banned but accepted Cuban Commission for Human Rights
and National Reconciliation, Amor was sentenced in 2005 to eight years
in prison for contempt of the state, Rangel got 25 years in 2003 for
terrorism and Rodriguez was handed a two-year sentence in 2009 for
public disorder.

Faxas got 20 years in 2000 for piracy and illegal possession of weapons,
while Diaz was sentenced to 19 years and six months in 1992 for
attempting to leave the country illegally, evasion and contempt, it added.

The CCDHRN did not provide details about the other four prisoners.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jjzU9s7k7y4aqG2vXQUGsisnr0UA?docId=CNG.86b7fca081287d5952255dcdbb99177e.261

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